The Book of the States | 2005 | Volume 37

Page 1

THE

BOOK

OF THE

STATES 2005 EDITION VOLUME 37

The Council of State Governments Lexington, Kentucky Headquarters: (859) 244-8000 Fax: (859) 244-8001 Internet: www.csg.org

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CONTENTS

Table of Contents FOREWORD ......................................................................................................................................... iii INTRODUCTION Emerging Trends Shaping State Governments: 2005 and Beyond Keon S. Chi .................................................................................................................................. xix Chapter One

STATE CONSTITUTIONS ......................................................................................................................... 1 ARTICLE

State Constitutional Developments in 2004 Janice C. May .................................................................................................................................. 3 Table A State Constitutional Changes by Method of Initiation: 1998–99, 2000–01, 2002–03 and 2004 ......................................................................... 3 Table B Substantive Changes in State Constitutions: Proposed and Adopted: 2000–01, 2002–03 and 2004 ......................................................................................... 6 TABLES

State Constitutions 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6

General Information on State Constitutions (As of January 1, 2005) ........................ Constitutional Amendment Procedure: By the Legislature (Constitutional Provisions) .......................................................................................... Constitutional Amendment Procedure: By Initiative (Constitutional Provisions) .......................................................................................... Procedures for Calling Constitutional Conventions (Constitutional Provisions) .......................................................................................... State Constitutional Commissions (Operative during January 1, 2004 to January 1, 2005) ............................................. State Constitutional Changes by Constitutional Initiative (2004) .............................

10 12 14 15 17 18

Chapter Two

FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS .......................................................................... 19 ARTICLES

The New Politics of Federalism Paul E. Peterson ............................................................................................................................ 21

State-Federal Relations: Defense, Demography, Debt, and Deconstruction as Destiny John Kincaid ................................................................................................................................. 25

Reflections on Intergovernmental Re-Balancing: Back to the Future Carl W. Stenberg ........................................................................................................................... 31

Interstate Relations Trends Joseph F. Zimmerman ................................................................................................................... 36

Interstate Compacts: Trends and Issues

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John Mountjoy and Melissa Bell .................................................................................................. Figure A Obstacles to Compact Development ........................................................................... Figure B Obstacles to Compact Enactment ................................................................................ Figure C Obstacles to Compact Implementation ....................................................................... Figure D Obstacles to Compact Administration ......................................................................... Table A Most Popular Types of Compact-Related Support .....................................................

42 43 44 45 46 47

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The Geographic Distribution of Federal Funds Edward N. Trevelyan .................................................................................................................... Table A Top 10 Federal Programs, Excluding Loans and Insurance ....................................... Table B Top 10 Federal Retirement and Disability Programs ................................................. Table C Top 10 Federal Other Direct Payment Programs ........................................................ Table D Top 10 Federal Grant Programs .................................................................................. Table E Federal Procurement Programs ................................................................................... Table F Federal Salary and Wage Programs ............................................................................ Table G Top 10 Federal Loan and Insurance Programs ...........................................................

50 50 51 52 53 54 55 56

TABLES

Federal Aid 2.1 2.2

Total Federal Grants to State and Local Governments, By State and Region: 1995–2003 ................................................................................ 57 Federal Aid to State and Local Governments, Selected Programs by State: Fiscal Year 2003 .......................................................................................................... 58

Federal and State Finances 2.3 2.4

2.5

2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13

Summary of Federal Government Expenditure, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 ........................................................... Federal Government Expenditure for Direct Payments for Individuals for Retirement and Disability, for Selected Programs, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 ........................................................... Federal Government Expenditure for Direct Payments Other Than for Retirement and Disability, for Selected Programs, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 ........................................................... Federal Government Expenditure for Grants By Agency, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 ........................................................... Federal Government Expenditure for Procurement Contracts, By Agency, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 ....................................... Federal Government Expenditure for Salaries and Wages, By Agency, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 ....................................... Federal Government Insurance and Loan Programs, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 ........................................................... Per Capita Amounts of Federal Government Expenditure, By Major Object Category, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 .............. Percent Distribution of Federal Government Expenditure, By Major Object Category, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 .............. Federal Government Expenditure for Defense Department and All Other Agencies, By State and Outlying Area: Fiscal Year 2003 .......................... State Rankings For Per Capita Amounts of Federal Government Expenditure: Fiscal Year 2003 ....................................................................................

77

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80 82 86 89 94 96 97 98 99

Chapter Three

STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH ............................................................................................................ 101 ARTICLES

The “Good” Legislature Alan Rosenthal ............................................................................................................................ 103

2004 Legislative Elections Tim Storey ................................................................................................................................... 107 Figure A Legislative Seats Held by Democrats and Republicans 1938–2005 ........................ 108 Figure B State Legislative Party Control ................................................................................. 109 vi

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The Effects of Legislative Term Limits Jennifer Drage Bowser ................................................................................................................. 111 Table A States with Legislative Term Limits .......................................................................... 111 Table B Turnover in House Chambers in Select Term Limit States ...................................... 112 Table C Female Legislators in Select Term Limit States ....................................................... 113

State Legislative Redistricting in 2003–2004: Emerging Trends and Issues in Reapportionment Ronald E. Weber ......................................................................................................................... 116 Table A State Conditions and Litigation Affecting State Senate Redistricting in the 2000s 123 Table B State Conditions and Litigation Affecting State House Redistricting in the 2000s . 124 TABLES

State Legislatures 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.3A 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.9 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 3.20 3.21 3.22 3.23 3.24

Names of State Legislative Bodies and Convening Places ...................................... 125 Legislative Sessions: Legal Provisions ..................................................................... 126 The Legislators: Numbers, Terms, and Party Affiliations: 2005 .............................. 130 The Legislators: Numbers, Terms, and Party Affiliations, By Region: 2005 .......... 132 Membership Turnover in the Legislatures: 2004 ...................................................... 133 The Legislators: Qualifications for Election ............................................................. 134 Senate Leadership Positions: Methods of Selection ................................................. 136 House Leadership Positions: Methods of Selection ................................................. 138 Method of Setting Legislative Compensation .......................................................... 140 Legislative Compensation: Regular Sessions ........................................................... 142 Legislative Compensation: Interim Payments and Other Direct Payments ............. 144 Additional Compensation for Senate Leaders .......................................................... 147 Additional Compensation for House Leaders ........................................................... 149 State Legislative Retirement Benefits ....................................................................... 151 Bill Pre-Filing, Reference and Carryover ................................................................. 157 Time Limits on Bill Introduction .............................................................................. 159 Enacting Legislation: Veto, Veto Override and Effective Date ................................ 161 Legislative Appropriations Process: Budget Documents and Bills .......................... 164 Fiscal Notes: Content and Distribution ..................................................................... 166 Bill and Resolution Introductions and Enactments: 2004 Regular Sessions ........... 168 Bill and Resolution Introductions and Enactments: 2004 Special Sessions ............ 170 Staff for Individual Legislators ................................................................................. 172 Staff for Legislative Standing Committees ............................................................... 174 Standing Committees: Appointment and Number .................................................... 176 Rules Adoption and Standing Committees: Procedure ............................................. 178

Chapter Four

STATE EXECUTIVE BRANCH ............................................................................................................... 181 ARTICLES

The State of the States in 2005: Facing Up to the Problem? Katherine Willoughby ................................................................................................................. Table A State Tax Collections by Type of Tax, 1994 and 2004, 3rd Quarter .......................... Table B State Revenue Generating Strategies in Fiscal Years 2003 and 2004 ...................... Table C State Expenditure Reduction Measures in Fiscal Years 2003 and 2004 ..................

183 183 184 186

Governors: Elections, Campaign Costs and Powers Thad Beyle .................................................................................................................................. 191 Figure A Gubernatorial Elections Expenditures ...................................................................... 195 Table A Gubernatorial Elections: 1970–2004 ........................................................................ 192 The Council of State Governments vii

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CONTENTS Table B Table C Table D Table E Table F

Total Costs of Gubernatorial Elections: 1977–2003 ................................................. Costs of Gubernatorial Campaigns, Most Recent Elections 2000–2003 ................. Women Governors ..................................................................................................... Impeachments and Removals of Governors ............................................................. Governors’ Institutional Powers: 1960 vs. 2005 .......................................................

194 196 197 198 200

Staffing the Governor’s Office: A Comparative Analysis Patrick Fisher and David Nice .................................................................................................... Table A Size of Governor’s Staff in the 50 States .................................................................. Table B State Characteristics and Gubernatorial Staffing: Zero-Order Correlations ............ Table C Regression Analysis of Gubernatorial Staffing ........................................................

203 205 205 206

Gubernatorial Incapacity and Succession Provisions Brian J. Gaines and Brian D. Roberts ........................................................................................ 208 Table A Provisions for Disability-Based Gubernatorial Succession in the 50 States ........... 213 TABLES

Governors 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7

The Governors, 2005 ................................................................................................. The Governors: Qualifications for Office ................................................................. The Governors: Compensation, Staff, Travel and Residence .................................. The Governors: Powers ............................................................................................. Gubernatorial Executive Orders: Authorization, Provisions, Procedures ................ State Cabinet Systems ............................................................................................... The Governors: Provisions and Procedures for Transition ......................................

215 217 218 220 222 225 227

Executive Branch 4.8 4.9 4.10 4.11

Impeachment Provisions in the States ...................................................................... Constitutional and Statutory Provisions for Number of Consecutive Terms of Elected State Officials .......................................................... Selected State Administrative Officials: Methods of Selection ............................... Selected State Administrative Officials: Annual Salaries By Region ......................

229 231 233 239

ARTICLE

2004 Lieutenant Governors’ Elections Julia Nienaber Hurst ................................................................................................................... 245 TABLES

Lieutenant Governors 4.12 4.13 4.14

The Lieutenant Governors, 2005 ............................................................................... 248 Lieutenant Governors: Qualifications and Terms ..................................................... 249 Lieutenant Governors: Powers and Duties ............................................................... 250

ARTICLE

Secretaries of State and Election Reform in the States Meredith B. Imwalle ................................................................................................................... 252 TABLES

Secretaries of State 4.15 4.16 4.17 4.18

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The Secretaries of State, 2005 ................................................................................... Secretaries of State: Qualifications for Office .......................................................... Secretaries of State: Election and Registration Duties ............................................. Secretaries of State: Custodial, Publication and Legislative Duties ........................

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255 257 258 260


CONTENTS ARTICLE

Attorneys General: Emerging Trends and Issues Angelita Plemmer ....................................................................................................................... 261 TABLES

Attorneys General 4.19 4.20 4.21 4.22 4.23

The Attorneys General, 2005 .................................................................................... Attorneys General: Qualifications for Office ........................................................... Attorneys General: Prosecutorial and Advisory Duties ............................................ Attorneys General: Consumer Protection Activities, Subpoena Powers and Antitrust Duties ..................................................................... Attorneys General: Duties to Administrative Agencies and Other Responsibilities

268 269 270 272 274

ARTICLE

State Treasurers: Guardians of the Public’s Purse The National Association of State Treasurers ............................................................................ 275 TABLES

Treasurers 4.24 4.25 4.26

The Treasurers, 2005 ................................................................................................. 279 Treasurers: Qualifications for Office ........................................................................ 280 Treasurers: Duties of Office ...................................................................................... 281

ARTICLE

Trends in State Government Accounting, Auditing and Treasury W. Daniel Ebersole ..................................................................................................................... 282 TABLES

Auditors and Comptrollers 4.27 4.28 4.29 4.30 4.31 4.32

The State Auditors, 2005 ........................................................................................... State Auditors: Scope of Agency Authority .............................................................. State Auditors: Types of Audits ................................................................................. The State Comptrollers, 2005 .................................................................................... State Comptrollers Qualifications for Office ............................................................ State Comptrollers: Duties and Responsibilities ......................................................

286 288 290 292 294 295

Chapter Five

STATE JUDICIAL BRANCH .................................................................................................................. 297 ARTICLES

Trends in State Courts: Rising Caseloads and Vanishing Trials David B. Rottman ....................................................................................................................... Figure A Total Criminal Dispositions in 23 States, 1976–2002 .............................................. Figure B Total Civil Dispositions in 22 States, 1976–2002 .................................................... Figure C Total Criminal Jury and Bench Trials in 23 States, 1976–2002 ............................... Figure D Total Civil Jury Trials in 22 States, 1976–2002 ....................................................... Table A Trends in State Trial Court Case Filings, 1993–2002 ..............................................

299 300 301 302 303 300

2004 Judicial Elections David B. Rottman and Roy A. Schotland ................................................................................... 305

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CONTENTS TABLES

State Courts 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 5.6 5.7

State Courts of Last Resort ........................................................................................ 309 State Intermediate Appellate Courts and General Trial Courts: Number of Judges and Terms .................................................................................... 311 Qualifications of Judges of State Appellate Courts and General Trial Courts ........ 313 Compensation of Judges of Appellate Courts and General Trial Courts ................. 315 Selected Data on Court Administrative Offices ........................................................ 317 Selection and Retention of Judges ............................................................................ 318 Removal of Judges ..................................................................................................... 322

Chapter Six

STATE POLITICAL PARTIES, ELECTIONS AND ETHICS ............................................................................ 329 ARTICLES

The Future of Political Parties in the States Sarah M. Morehouse and Malcolm E. Jewell ............................................................................ Table A State Party Control and State Two-Party Competition, 1980–2000 ......................... Table B Gubernatorial Nominations and Party System Strength ........................................... Table C Contribution Limits to State Parties and from State Parties ..................................... Table D Party Funds from All Sources and Percentage Raised from State Party ..................

331 333 336 340 341

2004 Election Success and State Initiatives R. Doug Lewis ............................................................................................................................ 346 TABLES

Elections 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 6.8

State Executive Branch Officials to be Elected: 2005–2009 ................................... State Legislatures: Members to be Elected, 2005–2009 .......................................... Methods of Nominating Candidates for State Offices .............................................. Election Dates for National, State and Local Elections (Formulas and dates of state elections) ..................................................................... Polling Hours: General Elections .............................................................................. Voter Registration Information .................................................................................. Voting Statistics for Gubernatorial Elections By Region: 2001–2004 .................... Voter Turnout for Presidential Elections By Region: 1996, 2000 and 2004 ............

350 352 354 356 360 361 363 365

ARTICLE

Trends and Issues in State Ethics Agencies David E. Freel ............................................................................................................................. 366 TABLES

Ethics 6.9 6.10 6.11 6.12

Ethics Agencies: Jurisdiction Subject Areas ............................................................. Ethics Agencies: Jurisdiction .................................................................................... Ethics Agencies: Advisory Opinions, Investigations & Training ............................. Ethics Agencies: Personal Financial Disclosure Statements ....................................

374 376 378 381

Lobbying 6.13 6.14

Lobbyists: Definitions and Prohibited Activities ...................................................... 384 Lobbyists: Registration and Reporting ..................................................................... 386

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CONTENTS ARTICLE

2004 Initiatives and Referendums John G. Matsusaka ...................................................................................................................... Figure A Number of Statewide Initiatives ................................................................................ Table A State-by-State Totals, 2004 ........................................................................................ Table B Subjects in 2004 .........................................................................................................

388 391 389 390

TABLE

Initiative and Referendum 6.15

Statewide Initiatives and Referendums, 2004 .......................................................... 393

Chapter Seven

STATE FINANCE AND DEMOGRAPHICS ............................................................................................... 399 State Budgets: Recent Trends and Outlook Donald J. Boyd ............................................................................................................................ 401 Figure A Real Per Capita State Government Tax Revenue Indexed to Pre-Crisis Peak ......... 402 Figure B Percentage Change in Real Per Capita State Tax Revenue, 2000 to 2004 ............... 403 Table A Real Per Capita General Fund Operating Expenditures ........................................... 404 Table B Projected Growth in Population Aged 65+: States Facing Fastest Growth, 2005 to 2010 ............................................................. 404

State Budgets in 2004 and 2005: The Long and Twisty Recovery Nick Samuels .............................................................................................................................. 408

State Tax Collections: Eroding Tax Bases William F. Fox and LeAnn Luna ................................................................................................ Figure A U.S. State Tax Revenue as a Percent of Personal Income, 1989–2003 ................... Figure B U.S. State Tax Revenue Growth, 1989–2003 ........................................................... Table A Selected U.S. Tax Elasticities, 1992–2003 ...............................................................

411 412 413 414

Fundamental Federal Tax Reform and the States W. Bartley Hildreth ..................................................................................................................... Figure A Per Capita Fiscal Impact of the National Retail Sales Tax on State and Local Governments, Divided by the Mean .......................................... Figure B Using the Property Tax to Cover the Fiscal Impact of the National Retail Sales Tax, Divided by the Mean ...................................................... Table A Impact of Fundamental Federal Income Tax Reforms on State and Local Government Budgets ....................................................................... Table B What is the NRST Quoted Tax Rate? ........................................................................

417 420 421 418 419

Trends in State Retirement Systems Frank T. Baumgardner ................................................................................................................ Table A Percent Distribution of Assets in State Public Employee Retirement Systems: Fiscal Years 1997, 2002, 2003 ................................................ Table B Membership and Benefit Operations of State-Administered Employee Retirement Systems, Last Month of Fiscal Year: March 2003 ............... Table C Number, Membership, and Monthly Benefit Payments of State-Administered Employee Retirement Systems: 1993–2003 ............................ Table D National Summary of Finances of State-Administered Employee Retirement Systems: 1993–2003 ...............................................................................

424 425 429 431 432

Trends in Public Retirement Systems: Stresses in the System Sujit M. CanagaRetna ................................................................................................................. 434 Table A Actuarial Funding Ratio ............................................................................................ 439 Table B Twelve Plans that did not Provide Either Actuarial Assets and/or Actuarial Liabilities ........................................................................................ 442 The Council of State Governments

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CONTENTS TABLES

Taxes 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7

State Tax Amnesty Programs: 1982–2005 ................................................................ 443 State Excise Tax Rates (As of January 1, 2005) ....................................................... 445 Food and Drug Sales Tax Exemptions (As of January 1, 2005) .............................. 447 State Individual Income Taxes (As of January 1, 2005) ........................................... 448 State Personal Income Taxes: Federal Starting Points (As of January 1, 2005) ...... 450 Range of State Corporate Income Tax Rates (As of January 1, 2005) .................... 451 Property Taxes by State and Region: 2002 and 2003 ............................................... 453

Budgets 7.8 7.9 7.10 7.11 7.12

Fiscal 2004 State General Fund, Preliminary Actual, By Region ............................ Fiscal 2005 State General Fund, Appropriated, By Region ..................................... Allowable State Investments ..................................................................................... Cash Management Programs and Services ............................................................... Demand Deposits .......................................................................................................

454 456 458 460 462

ARTICLES

The Population 65 Years and Older: Aging in America Karen Humes ............................................................................................................................... Figure A U.S. Population 65 Years and Over, By Age Group: Census Counts, 1900 to 2000, and Projections, 2010–2050 ............................................................... Figure B Percent of State Population 65 Years and Over: 2003 .............................................. Table A Demographic, Social, Health and Economic Characteristics of the Population 65 Years and Over for the United States and States: 2003 ..............

464 465 467 469

Women in State Government: Historical Overview and Current Trends Susan J. Carroll ........................................................................................................................... Figure A Proportion of Women Among Statewide Elective Officials ..................................... Figure B Proportion of Women Among State Legislators ....................................................... Table A Women Governors Throughout History .................................................................... Table B Women Statewide Elected Officials, 2005 ............................................................... Table C Women in State Legislatures .....................................................................................

471 474 475 472 473 476

Chapter Eight

STATE MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION ................................................................................... 479 ARTICLES

Trends in State Information and Technology Management Chris Dixon, Drew Leatherby and Mary Gay Whitmer ............................................................. 481 Figure A State CIO Reporting .................................................................................................. 482 Table A State Statewide Management Responsibilities of the CIO ....................................... 486 Table B Composition of IT Governing Boards ....................................................................... 487 Table C Statewide IT Procurement Responsibility ................................................................ 488

Trends and Issues in State Libraries: Balancing Books and Bytes Thomas J. Hennen Jr. .................................................................................................................. Table A Types of Public Library Organization in the U.S.: 2003 .......................................... Table B 2003 Average Library Revenue Per Capita in the 50 States ..................................... Table C Library Visits and Library Spending Per Capita in the 50 States .............................

489 490 491 493

Professional Licensing Pam Brinegar ............................................................................................................................... 495 Table A State Regulation of Selected Non-Health Occupations and Professions: December 2004 ..................................................................................... 499 Table B State Regulation of Health Occupations and Professions: December 2004 ............ 501 xii

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Trends and Issues in State Motor Vehicle Agencies: More Than Just a License Linda R. Lewis-Pickett ............................................................................................................... 507 Table A Member Status of Driver’s License Compact (DLC) and Non-Resident Violator Compact (NRVC) ................................................................ 510 Table B Driver’s License Compact (DLC) and Non-Resident Violator Compact (NRVC) Member Joinder Dates ................................................................ 511

Trends in State Park Operations Daniel D. McLean and Traci Hogan ........................................................................................... Figure A State Park Operating Budgets: Fiscal Years 1994–2003 .......................................... Figure B State Park Generates Revenues: Fiscal Years 1994–2003 ........................................ Figure C Percentage of Contribution to Operating Budget ..................................................... Table A State Park Managed Acres: Fiscal Years 1994–2003 ............................................... Table B Comparison Impacts of State Park Operations ......................................................... Table C State Park Generated Revenues: Fiscal Years 1994–2003 .......................................

512 514 516 517 513 514 515

Telecommunications Policy: Life, Liberty and Data Wayne W. Hall Jr. ........................................................................................................................ 519 Chapter Nine

SELECTED STATE POLICIES AND PROGRAMS ...................................................................................... 523 ARTICLES

State Emergency Management and Homeland Security: A Changing Dynamic Trina R. Sheets ............................................................................................................................ 525 Table A State Emergency Management: Agency Structure, Budget and Staffing ................. 530 Table B State Homeland Security Structures ......................................................................... 531

The Impact of Terrorism on State Law Enforcement Chad Foster and Gary Cordner ................................................................................................... Table A State Law Enforcement Agencies ............................................................................. Table B Operating Expenditures and Asset Forfeiture Receipts of State Law Enforcement Agencies, 2000 ................................................................... Table C Homeland Security Roles for State Law Enforcement ............................................. Table D States’ Allocation of Law Enforcement Resources ..................................................

532 534 535 536 537

No Child Left Behind: A Perspective Ken Meyer ................................................................................................................................... 540

Issues in Faculty Salaries and Higher Education Financing John W. Curtis ............................................................................................................................. 544 Table A Average Full-Time Faculty Salary 2003–2004, By Institutional Category and Control ...................................................................... 545 Table B Average Full-time Faculty Salary in Four-Year Institutions, 2003–2004, by State, Institutional Control, Institution Category, and Academic Rank .............. 549

Trends in Health Insurance Affordability Jenny Sewell ............................................................................................................................... 551 TABLE

Health 9.1

Health Insurance Coverage Status By State for All People: 2003 ........................... 555

ARTICLES

The 2025 Outlook for Oil and Gas James M. Kendell ........................................................................................................................ 556 Figure A World Oil Prices in Five Cases, 1990–2025 ............................................................. 557 Figure B Petroleum Supply, Consumption, and Imports, 1990–2025 ..................................... 558 The Council of State Governments

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CONTENTS Figure C Net U.S. Imports of Natural Gas, 1970–2025 ........................................................... 559 Figure D Lower 48 Natural Gas Wellhead Prices, 1970–2025 ................................................ 560

State Economic Development Strategies: Job Growth and Retention in a Recovering Economy Jeffrey Finkle .............................................................................................................................. 563

Federal Incentives Ruling and the Corporate Attraction Process Adam Bruns ................................................................................................................................ 567 Table A Financial Assistance for Industry .............................................................................. 571 Table B Tax Incentives for Industry ........................................................................................ 573

State Science and Technology: Best Practices Mark Holzer and Richard Schwester .......................................................................................... Figure A Technology Development Corporation of Maryland ................................................ Figure B New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research ............... Figure C Ben Franklin Technology Development Authority and Ben Franklin Technology Partners ............................................................................ Table A State Science and Technology Models ......................................................................

575 577 578 579 580

The New Rural Development Challenge: Revitalizing Rural America Rob Atkinson ............................................................................................................................... 582

Trends and Issues in State Highways and Transportation John Horsley ............................................................................................................................... 585 Table A State Disbursements for Highways: Highway Statistics 1983 and 2003 ................. 586 TABLES

Highways 9.2 9.3

State Revenues Used for Highways by Region: 2003 .............................................. 591 Apportionment of Federal-Aid Highway Funds by Region: Fiscal Year 2004 ........ 593

ARTICLE

Trends in Probation and Parole in the States William D. Burrell ...................................................................................................................... 595 TABLES

Criminal Justice/Corrections 9.4 9.5 9.6 9.7 9.8

Trends in State Prison Population, by Region: 2002–2003 ...................................... Number of Sentenced Prisoners Admitted and Released by Region: 2000–2002 ... Adults on Probation by Region: 2003 ....................................................................... Adults on Parole by Region: 2003 ............................................................................ Capital Punishment (as of December 2003) .............................................................

601 602 603 604 605

ARTICLES

Trends in Welfare Programs Sheila R. Zedlewski and Jennifer Holland ................................................................................. 607 Table A Trends in TANF Caseload, 1996–2003 ..................................................................... 611 Table B TANF Spending: Combined Federal and State, FY 2003 ........................................ 612

U.S.-Mexico Trade: Trends and Issues Edgar Ruiz and Sujit M. CanagaRetna ....................................................................................... 613 Table A United States vs. Mexico ........................................................................................... 614 Table B Exports to Mexico: Top Five States, 1999–2003 ...................................................... 614

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CONTENTS Chapter Ten

STATE PAGES ................................................................................................................................... 619 TABLES 10.1

Official Names of States and Jurisdictions, Capitals, Zip Codes and Central Switchboards .......................................................................................... 10.2 Historical Data on the States ..................................................................................... 10.3 State Statistics ............................................................................................................ State Pages ..................................................................................................................................

621 622 624 626

INDEX .............................................................................................................................................. 641

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Chapter One STATE CONSTITUTIONS ................................................................................................................... 1

Chapter Two FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS ...................................................................... 19

Chapter Three STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH ......................................................................................................... 101 Chapter Four STATE EXECUTIVE BRANCH ........................................................................................................... 181

Chapter Five STATE JUDICIAL BRANCH .............................................................................................................. 297

Chapter Six STATE POLITICAL PARTIES, ELECTIONS AND ETHICS ........................................................................ 329

Chapter Seven STATE FINANCE AND DEMOGRAPHICS ........................................................................................... 399

Chapter Eight STATE MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION ............................................................................... 479

Chapter Nine SELECTED STATE POLICIES AND PROGRAMS .................................................................................. 523 Chapter Ten STATE PAGES ................................................................................................................................ 619

INDEX .......................................................................................................................................... 641

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INTRODUCTION

Emerging Trends Shaping State Governments: 2005 and Beyond By Keon S. Chi In 2005, governors, legislators and judges and their staff in the three branches of our state governments are faced with unprecedented challenges—political, fiscal and management challenges stemming from both external and internal forces. External forces include global dynamics and terrorist threats, the proposed elimination of, or deep cuts in, some federal aid programs, continuous preemptions and mandates, and federal encroachment upon state regulatory powers. Internal forces are generated by increasing partisan competition in legislative chambers as well as between the three branches of state government, serious structural deficits in budget-making, and growing opportunities and pressures from direct citizen control—initiatives and referenda—in many states. One broad question state policy-makers should be asking is: “How should we define changing roles of the state to face up with these trends?” Under these external and internal forces, decision-makers are expected to be more innovative, effective and efficient than ever before in managing agencies and delivering services because of high public expectations and growing demands. In order to redefine and prioritize states’ roles, policy-makers might want to have an update on what is taking place between the state and the federal government and within the three branches of state government across the nation. For those who are trying to anticipate what might happen in the remainder of this year and in 2006, major trends described in this issue of The Book of the States might be helpful guides. What follows in this introductory chapter are highlights of a few external and internal forces that are likely to shape the way state governments are making decisions.

Federalism New Politics The topic of federalism and intergovernmental relations will continue to be one of the major external forces affecting the states, especially in implementing some of the most expensive state-federal joint programs, such as homeland security, Medicaid and No Child Left Behind. State officials like to know what they can expect under the Bush administration to tackle these and other federal-state programs in the next few years. The answer might not be very promising.

During the past several years, state policy-makers have experienced continuous federal encroachment upon states’ rights when Republicans controlled both the executive and legislative branches of the national government. Clearly, this trend appeared to be contrary to the past patterns of the workings of American federalism under each of the two major political parties. In the past half a century, Republican presidents usually sided with conservatives who favored a smaller role for the federal government with stronger states, while Democratic presidents tended to favor a larger role for the national government, thus drawing criticisms from traditional advocates for state rights and Republicans. Such a traditional description, however, does not seem to apply to the current Republican administration or Congress. In his article, “The New Politics of Federalism,” Paul E. Peterson of Harvard University describes the changing trend in American federalism from a historical perspective and says, “Jefferson is recognized as the spiritual father of the Democratic Party, while Hamilton is at times given comparable status among Republicans. But as political interests changed, so did the positions of the two political parties. Throughout most of the 20th century, it was the New Deal Democrats who celebrated an expansion of the national government in ways Hamilton might have blessed, while conservative Republicans defended states rights that Jefferson had extolled.” Peterson continues: “Today, the parties are returning to their historic roots. In the Spring of 2005, the Republican leadership in Congress asked federal courts to assure jurisdiction in the Schiavo case, which raised issues long thought to be the preserve of state courts. Most Democrats opposed the move. Only weeks earlier, the Republican majority in Congress, at the behest of the president, had passed sweeping legislation that shifted class action suits that transcended state boundaries from state to federal courts, a nationalizing move that harkens back to the days of Hamilton and his close ally, Chief Justice John Marshall. Meanwhile, the vast majority of congressional Democrats fiercely defended the prerogatives of state trial courts—notwithstanding the party’s deep-rooted preference of federal over state courts during the Great Society years.” The recent trend in American federalism characterized by Peterson is corroborated by other observThe Council of State Governments

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INTRODUCTION ers of American federalism, including John Kincaid, former executive director of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations. In his article, “State-Federal Relations: Defense, Demography, Debt, and Deconstruction as Destiny,” Kincaid lists examples of continuing “coercive federalism” during the Bush administration with “a shift of federal aid from places to persons, policy conditions and earmarks attached to federal aid, preemptions, federal encroachments on state taxation, federalization of state criminal law, defunct intergovernmental institutions, reduced federal-state cooperation within major intergovernmental programs, and federal court litigation.” His prediction is, “Although state activism will generate a kind of competitive state-federal federalism, coercive federalism will be the system’s dominant motif and will be exacerbated by the fiscal pressures generated by defense, demography, debt, and deconstruction.” Rebalancing Federal-State Relations The balance in state-federal relations in the next few years is likely to favor the national government. How should state policy-makers face up with such an imbalance in the years to come? Carl W. Stenberg, former executive director of The Council of State Governments, proposes rebalancing federal-state relations by “working together more strategically and building effective horizontal and vertical networks.” He cites the state-led tobacco settlement as an example of vertical network and the Streamlined State Sales and Use Tax as an example of horizontal network. As John Mountjoy and Melissa Bell describe in their article, “Interstate Compacts: Trends and Issues,” The Council of State Governments created the National Center for Interstate Compacts in 2004. This center serves as a national information clearinghouse on interstate compacts, provides training and technical assistance in helping states and manages the compact process. The center also promotes interstate compacts as a tool for cooperative state action, develops standards and provides an adaptive structure for states. Interstate cooperation itself, however, might not be sufficient to slow down federal encroachment upon the states. In his article, “Interstate Relations Trends,” Joseph F. Zimmerman of the University at Albany suggests: Compacts, agreements, and enactment of harmonious regulatory laws have been promoted as means to discourage Congress from exer-

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cising its powers of preemption removing regulatory authority completely or partially in specified fields from states. Nevertheless, we conclude disparate state regulatory statutes and regulations, increasing globalization of the domestic economy, international trade treaties, lobbying by interest groups, and technological developments will result in Congress enacting preemption statutes.

Congress To better comprehend federal-state relations, state policy-makers need to pay attention to how the first session of the 109th Congress handles a variety of issues affecting the states. State attorneys general, as their state’s chief law enforcement officer, will be testifying before Congressional committees in 2005 as they have done during the last Congress. Major issues they testified about included consumer credit, on-line pharmaceuticals, I.D. theft, banking issues and predatory lending. The issues in consideration during the 109th Congress in 2005 could include: antitrust, Medicare Prescription Drug Improvement and Modernization Act of 2003, drug price competition, prescription drug importation, patient access to health care, antitrust exemption for insurance industry, antitrust enforcement, retail gas prices, bankruptcy, consumer protection, identity theft, “Do Not Call,” spam, household goods movers, Fair Credit Reporting Act, cell phone bill of rights, online pharmaceuticals, privacy, rent to own, debt counseling, debt consolidation and debt settlement, predatory lending, anti-pyramid scheme legislation, drug price disclosure, Internet file sharing, protecting older Americans from fraud, and flu vaccine price gouging. In addition, the first session of the 109th Congress is likely to deal with crime, including cyber crime, end-of-life health care, environment, tobacco and violence against women. There seems to be ample room for further federal preemption of traditional state jurisdictions.

Three Branches Constitutional Amendments Although citizen discontent with state government is not likely to disappear any time soon, there might not be any significant changes in public attitudes towards comprehensive constitutional amendments that are designed to radically reform the structure and function of state government. As Janice May’s ar-

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INTRODUCTION ticle describes, there were many constitutional amendments proposed in 2004 to change the structure or procedures of all three branches of state government, but these were aimed at minor changes as they have been in recent years. Of the legislative amendments, attempts to change term limits by extending the number of years legislators could serve were defeated in two states. Virginia voters agreed to modification of reapportionment laws to avoid double or no representation of residents in certain districts. Among the executive branch ballot measures was a Colorado amendment to strengthen the governor’s power of appointment, which was rejected. Virginia voters also approved an amendment which increases the number of officers who can succeed to the governor in the event of a terrorist attack and permit the lower house to convene to elect an acting governor and, if necessary, to waive eligibility requirements. State judicial branches were changed very little by amendment in 2004 despite efforts to do so. Voters defeated a South Dakota amendment that would have extended merit selection of judges from the supreme court to the circuit courts. New Hampshire voters defeated an amendment to resolve a separation of powers dispute between the legislature and the judiciary over the authority to make rules on judicial administration and procedures. Voters in Arizona and magistrates in North Carolina passed ballot measures regarding the office of justice of the peace and magistrates, respectively. During the 2004 elections, 34 states passed approximately two-thirds of the 162 state-level ballot propositions. The most popular issue was the gay marriage issue, with 11 states approving constitutional amendments in November defending traditional marriage between a man and woman. Other high profile issues include marijuana legislation, gambling, election reform, fiscal policies, environment, and health care related matters. In 2004, approximately $200 million was spent for propositions in California alone. Whether spending big money for such ballot measures helps determine the outcome of direct citizen control is not certain, however.

Legislatures Partisan Politics State political parties are not only getting stronger but also more competitive, especially in state legislatures. Observers of American politics tend to disagree with the role of political parties at the national or state level. Some have predicted a decline of party

politics in general, while others have taken a contrary view. The current and future trends appear to be a resurgence of party politics at all levels of government. As political scientists Sarah Morehouse and Malcolm Jewell describe in their article, “The Future of Political Parties in the States,” many state political parties are becoming stronger, not weaker because they have adapted to the new technology and provide valuable services to state and national candidates. “Far from the predicted decline,” the authors argue, “state parties have become parties in service. They provide services such as polling, campaign seminars, advertising and fundraising. State parties maintained their autonomy as they became more professionalized and more durable.” As the state legislative sessions began in early 2005, legislative seats in the 50 states were almost evenly occupied by Democrats and Republicans, and the difference between the two major parties was miniscule. For example, Republicans controlled 20 legislatures, Democrats held 19, and 10 were split with either party having both legislative chambers. Before the 2004 elections, the breakdown was 21 Republican legislatures, 17 Democratic and 11 split. Implications of the party parity in state legislatures are not clear, but there could be more deadlocks and delays during legislative sessions and budget-making processes. Term Limits The issue of legislative term limits does not appear to be a major concern to legislators in most states in 2005. Term limits measures, begun in 1990 in three states, had been popular when a total of 21 states adopted them by 2000. Since then, the measure was thrown out by courts in six states and repealed in two states, leaving 15 with term limits in 2005. Only 12 state legislatures presently operate under term limits, and the measure in the remaining three will kick in between 2006 and 2010. In an effort to assess the effect of term limits, the National Conference of State Legislatures, The Council of State Governments and State Legislative Leaders Forum have conducted a Joint Term Limits Project in the past three years. Jennifer Drage Bowser of the National Conference of State Legislatures reports some preliminary findings of the study project in her article, “The Effect of Legislative Term Limits.” She says: It is clear that term limits have brought many changes to the legislatures where they are in effect. Term limited legislatures report more The Council of State Governments

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INTRODUCTION general chaos, a decline in civility, reduced influence of legislative leaders and committees, and in some states, a shift in power relationships. However, the bottom line is that legislatures are resilient and highly adaptive institutions and continue to function efficiently under term limits. Many of the problems experienced by term limited legislatures are the same problems faced by all legislatures; term limits simply tend to amplify and accelerate them. As term limits continue to tighten their hold, and as veteran members continue to cycle out, the term limited legislatures will continue to evolve. As they do, they will provide valuable ideas that all legislatures, term limited or not, can adopt to improve their institutions. The joint study project is planning to publish two or three products in 2005 or 2006. Redistricting Partisan politics has been evident in recent redistricting practices for state legislative elections. Most, if not all, state legislators are elected from singlemember election districts, and redistricting in every 10 years has been a great deal of interest to observers of state politics. Ronald E. Weber of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee says, “Whereas the redistricting round of the 1990s can be described as the round of racial and ethnic predominance, the 2000 round showed a growing emergence of partisanship as the predominant pattern of conflict.” The author elaborates the trend as follows: The state legislatures were able to take into account race or ethnicity in drawing lines as had been the emphasis in the previous decade; however, since political partisanship of voters correlates highly with the racial and ethnic makeup of populations, the use of race and ethnicity was subordinated to the use of partisan criteria with the 2000 decade proving to be a round of either partisan gerrymandering or bi-partisan protection of incumbent state legislators. Finally, the partisanship surrounding state legislative districting processes of the current round has spurred a renewed interest in citizen initiatives to create less partisan reapportionment boards and commissions in states without them at the present time.

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Good Legislatures To be a good legislature, lawmakers must be responsive to their constituents, must have a balance between deliberative and political aspects during the legislative process and need to have effective leadership. In the past four decades or so, a number of national and regional organizations of state legislators, as well as academic and research groups, have conducted studies aimed at strengthen state legislatures. Some studies have dealt with institutional modernization while others addressed professionalism in legislatures. Of those, the 1971 report by the Citizen’s Conference on State Legislatures has been one of the most frequently cited studies of legislative bodies in the 50 states. In the report, CCSL evaluated each state based on five criteria: functionality, accountability, informedness, independence and representativeness (FAIIR). Each state was then ranked by scores in structural and operational factors. In his article, “The ‘Good’ Legislature,” Alan Rosenthal of Rutgers University offers an alternative to traditional evaluation criteria used by CCSL and other similar studies. The author argues “appearance,” “structure” and “product” should not be used as standards by which to make judgments of legislatures. Instead, he argues, state legislatures should be assessed by “the performance of three principal functions: representing constituents and constituencies, lawmaking, and balancing the power of the executive.” To be a “good” legislature, Rosenthal argues, there must be three conditions: first, legislators must be responsive to their constituents; second, there must be a balance between the deliberative aspects of and political aspects of lawmaking; and, third, there must be effective legislative leadership in the legislature. Rosenthal says, “Among the many responsibilities of leadership are finding common ground, facilitating compromise, forging consensus, and enabling a legislative majority to find and work its will.” The author presents detailed information on the actual workings of legislatures in legislator-constituency relations, legislative processes and relationships between legislators and governors.

Governors Elections, Powers, Staffing In 2005, a majority of the states have governors elected for the first time either in 2002 or 2004. The 2004 gubernatorial elections and resignations continued the recent trend of changes in the governorships across the states. In addition to the 11 gubernatorial races, two governors resigned their positions

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INTRODUCTION and left office before their terms were up. The results of the 2004 elections brought seven new governors into office, and they were split between the two parties, leaving the Republicans holding a 28 to 22 edge among the governors. Several governors are working in a “divided government” where the executive and legislative branches are controlled by opposing political parties. In general, governors’ powers have increased over the years, but not in all areas. For example, between 1960 and 2005, the overall institutional powers of the of the nation’s governors increased, according to Thad Beyle of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He found that the greatest increase among the individual gubernatorial powers was in their veto power as more governors gained an item veto. On the other hand, the gubernatorial budgetary power actually declined, and there has also been a drop in the gubernatorial party control in the state legislatures. As gubernatorial responsibilities increased in the past decades, staff support also increased drastically. The growth of staffing at the state level has been very uneven, and staff functions vary from state to state. The staff size ranges from less than 10 (Nebraska and Wyoming) to more than 200 (Florida and Texas). Contributing factors to the staff growth include the increasing complexity of governmental responsibilities, administrative expediency as well as political patronage and public relations.

Gubernatorial Succession Gubernatorial succession is likely to be a concern in some states, where succession provisions are not clearly provided, especially when dealing with emergency situations, such as a terrorist attacks. Several states have enacted new statutes since the 9/11 attacks. One example is found in Virginia where voters recently overwhelmingly supported a constitutional amendment adding an additional 14 potential successors to a line previously containing only three. Brian J. Gaines of the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and Brian D. Roberts of Principia College, the authors of “Gubernatorial Incapacity and Succession Provisions” recommend: “As officials and scholars revisit the question of how to handle the unthinkable in many states, they would do well also to re-examine their rules for handling an isolated emergency.” The question of gubernatorial succession has been raised routinely. In 2003 and 2004, four gubernatorial successions occurred, three due to resignations and one due to death. A lieutenant

governor in Nebraska became governor through succession when the previous governor was appointed a cabinet secretary in the federal government. Governors’ Policy Initiatives Would gubernatorial initiatives proposed in 2005 be adequate to solve current and emerging problems states are faced with? This is a question policy-makers should deal with when addressing long-term solutions. As in the past, governors have announced their policy initiatives in their annual state of the state addresses. Although empirical records show approximately half of such initiatives have not passed the legislatures in the past, it is useful for state policymakers to take a careful look at them to be better informed of what’s going on in other states. Moreover, they can benefit from innovations implemented by other states when attempting to solve the same or similar problems in their own states. Based on more than 40 state of the state addresses given in early 2005, Katherine Willoughby of Georgia State University summarizes her findings: “In 2005, most governors are promoting economic development through tax cuts and credits in order to be able to light up an ‘open for business’ sign in their state. Many governors are also calling for spending reductions and/or agency and program reorientations or reorganizations in order to reach budget balance.” These gubernatorial initiatives may be highlighted in two broad areas: revenue enhancement and spending reduction. To increase revenues, for example, they have proposed both traditional and innovative methods such as: initiating tax amnesty programs; accelerating tax payments; joining a multi-state lottery consortium; diverting tobacco settlement proceeds to general fund; and suspending implementation of voter initiative to divert general funds elsewhere. In order to reduce expenditures, governors have proposed such methods as: early retirement programs; terminating and/or amending state contracts; eliminating funding to non-essential appropriations; suspending transfers from the general fund; delaying scheduled payments to K–12 schools and payments to counties for property tax relief; requiring or increasing employee contributions to health care costs; and monthly agency spending targets. Other policy areas governors also talked about in the state of the state addresses include: containment of prescription drugs; reducing the opportunities to develop and deal methamphetamines; changing funding relationships with local governments; advancing protection of natural resources, the environment, development of renewable enThe Council of State Governments

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INTRODUCTION ergy resources, and water conservation; strengthening government ethics law; initiating elections reform; negotiating related to tribal gaming; advancing homeland security and public safety and legislating tort reform. Whether governors would be able to persuade legislatures to buy in these proposals this year is not easy to predict.

Election Reform

Courts Judicial Elections and Dispute Resolutions Judicial elections in 2005 may be characterized as heavy spending and active involvement by interest groups and trial lawyers if the recent judicial elections are indications. Preliminary figures for 2004 show candidates in 20 states spent more than $39 million on the supreme court contests in 44 states. When final tallies are out, this figure could approach the $45 million mark for 46 seats, the same amount spent in 2000. Political parties and other interest groups spent as much as $10 million, mainly in six states. In his review of state courts in 2004, David Rottman of the National Center for State Courts uses the phrase “vanishing trial” to characterize the recent trend, caused by insufficient funding and the backlog of cases. He says: “Courts need to anticipate changing demand for their service. Some signs that fundamental changes are taking place in the demand for court services were much discussed during 2004. Attention focused on the implications of what became known as ‘the vanishing trial’ phenomenon, a sustained decline in the number of trials, both trials by jury and trials by judge, in the state courts.” He continues: The state courts in 2004 continued to supply their basic service to the public: quietly deciding the nearly 100 million disputes that the public, businesses, and governments bought to them for resolution. During 2004, however, alarms sounded in many states where improving state finances did not translate into adequate funding for the courts, interrupting the services the courts provide. The courts in most states have been left to accommodate the steady rise in their workload without securing a commensurate growth in resources. The losers are the members of the public with disputes for which they cannot obtain resolution. Court reform continued along mainly familiar tracks, including the longstanding movement toward court sysxxiv

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tems that are more centralized, streamlined, and funded at the state rather than the local level. Still more imaginative ways were found to respond to the needs of the growing number of citizens that prefer to represent themselves in court.

By January 1, 2006, all states are scheduled to set up a voting system that meets requirements under the Help American Vote Act of 2002. Such requirements include notification to a voter if he/ she overvotes, or selects more than one candidate for the same race, and gives him or her the opportunity to correct the ballot; production of a permanent paper record with a manual audit capacity; provision of levels of access, privacy and independence to disabled voters that are equal to those available to other voters; and provision of alternative language accessibility. The 2004 elections are regarded as a “dramatic improvement” over the 2002 elections, as characterized by R. Doug Lewis of The Election Center, and states have been recognized with new initiatives to reform their election laws and practices. More than 11 million new voters participated due largely to increases in voter registration and active campaigns, and the increase in voters ranged 8 percent in Alaska to 27 percent in Florida. According to the National Association of Secretaries of State, many states are planning to focus on statewide voter registration databases, voting equipment, voter education and poll worker training, and the budgets the states included in their plans were largely based on the money allocated under HAVA in 2002.

Finance State Budgets Overall, state budgets in 2005 look much better than they did in the past four years. “States are recovering from the recent fiscal crisis,” says Donald L. Boyd of the Rockefeller Institute. Based on appropriations for fiscal 2005, Nick Samuels of the National Association of State Budget Officers reports state general fund spending will increase by 4.5 percent; only three states budgeted for less spending. Three states had spending growth of 10 percent or more in fiscal 2004 and appropriated budgets in eight states in fiscal 2005 do as well. As for revenues, 24 states increased taxes and fees for fiscal 2005, mostly from cigarette and other tobacco taxes. On the spend-

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INTRODUCTION ing side, 15 states were forced to make cuts in their fiscal 2004 budgets, compared with 38 states in 2002 and 40 states in 2003 that had budget cuts. Some experts on state finance, including William Fox and LeAnn Luna of the University of Tennessee, blame eroding tax bases for the recent state fiscal crises while others say these crises were in part “self inflicted” by the states because they have failed to address structural deficits. In their article, “State Tax Collections: Eroding Tax Bases,” the authors say, “Legislators, with a view towards long-term fiscal stability, need to better understand the fundamental attributes of their revenue sources, why some of their tax bases continue to erode, and some options for stemming the erosion.” Federal Aid Cuts In 2005 and 2006, state policy-makers should anticipate significant cuts in federal aid. With on-budget deficits of more than $400 billion projected each year through the next five years, states should expect decreasing federal aid. Federal grants to state and local governments were $423 billion in fiscal year 2004, accounting for one quarter of the federal budget for domestic programs. Grants account for approximately 30 percent of all state government revenue. Mandatory federal grants, which amount to approximately one-third of federal grants, include Medicaid, Temporary Assistance to Needy Families, and child nutrition programs; and discretionary programs include Title I education grants for the disabled, special education grants, and various public housing and community development grants. According to Nick Samuels, if President Bush’s budget proposal passes Congress in 2005, discretionary grants would be cut by 9.2 percent in real per-capita terms, and grants for mandatory programs other than Medicaid would be cut by 5.8 percent. Combined, these cuts would be equivalent to about a 2.4 percent reduction in state government tax revenue. Of all the federal aids to the states, Medicaid cuts are likely to have a greater impact on the states. Don Boyd estimates the impact of proposed Medicaid cuts as follows: The President has proposed $45 billion in net federal Medicaid savings over the next 10 years, reflecting $60 billion of cuts and $15 billion in new initiatives. Most of the federal savings would result in higher costs to states, but some would result in state savings, for a net cost to states of $34 billion over 10 years. The largest changes that would

provide savings to states include reductions in payments Medicaid will make to pharmacies and provisions that would make it harder for people seeking to enter nursing homes to shield assets from Medicaid. The largest changes that would shift costs from the federal government to states include limits on intergovernmental transfers, limits on administrative expenditures, and restrictions on case management expenditures. The President’s budget also proposed to increase outreach to and coverage of children, increasing federal and state expenditures. All told, Medicaid changes appear likely to increase state Medicaid expenditures by about 2–3 percent over 10 years. Federal Tax Reform Besides the proposed federal aid cuts, state policymakers also might have to worry about the effect of the proposed federal tax reform. In January 2005, President Bush established the President’s Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform to simplify tax laws, address equity issues and promote economic growth and job creation. There is a possibility that the federal government will enact a major overhaul of the federal tax system, adopting a retail sales tax, a consumption tax, or a value-added tax. Boyd says: “Whatever the merits of these changes for the federal tax system and the nation’s economy, all of these choices could create major—and largely undiscussed—problems for state and local government finances.” He offers his scenarios as follows: “Depending on very important details, these proposals could (a) eliminate the deductibility of state and local income and property taxes, raising the effective cost of state and local services and having dramatically different impacts across states, (b) tread into the traditional state-local terrain of sales taxes, making it difficult for state and local governments to raise revenue from these taxes, (c) make it impractically expensive for states to have their own income taxes if federal tax changes are in place of the existing federal income tax, and/or (d) raise the costs to states of maintaining and improving infrastructure, if municipal bond interest is no longer taxexempt.” Other experts on state finance, including W. Bartley Hildreth, formerly of Wichita State University, also agree with Boyd’s analysis by saying, “state and local budgets face significant impacts from fundamental federal income tax reform, including new

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INTRODUCTION budget costs and the effective loss of revenue choices. It is hard to pin down the precise nature of these implications at this time. At the least, any discussion of federal tax reform legislation deserves the careful scrutiny by state and local officials because there are significant fiscal federalism implications.” Retirement Systems In addition to aforementioned structural deficits and federal aid cuts, state retirement systems also have emerged as one of the major financial issues for state policy-makers to address. State policy-makers need to monitor the performance of state and local government retirement funds so as to avoid the financial pitfalls. The recent recession and current demographic trends, including aging boomers, have had a serious impact on state systems. According to Sujit CanagaRetna, with the Southern Legislative Conference, there are several factors that have contributed to the financial pitfall in the retirement systems. These include “the precarious financial position of private sector pensions and the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation; the looming shortfalls expected in the Social Security and Medicare programs in coming decades; and the low personal savings rates of most Americans, coupled with the high rates of consumer and household debt.” Over the past decade, according to Frank T. Baumgardner of the U.S. Census Bureau, the number of state administered public employee retirement systems has grown by 28 from the 190 in fiscal year 1993. Currently, there are 218 state retirement systems in the United States with a total 21.2 million active and inactive members. These systems usually extended state retirement benefits to new classes of employees, such as local law enforcement personnel, legislators, judges and local government employees. Local governments employ more than two-thirds of the active employees covered by state systems. In 2003, local government employees account for seven out of 10 active members. The state retirement systems command a total of $1.8 trillion in retirement assets, making them major players in the financial markets.

Management Increasing revenues and decreasing expenditures, as recommended by governors and legislators, may not be possible unless agency directors and administrators improve the way they manage resources and improve information technology. For example, state treasurers, auditors and comptrollers would have to

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provide increased services with a renewed sense of accountability, innovation in technology and strategic partnership initiatives. State personnel executives would have to have innovative workforce development plans; otherwise they are likely to face a workforce shortage in state governments. Some human resource management organizations call it a crisis. A joint study by the National Association of State Personnel Executives and The Council of State Governments in 2002 estimated that state governments could lose at least 30 percent of their employees in the next few years due to the growing rate of employee retirement, the composition of current workforce with less-trained workers and worsened state budget problems. State chief information officers would have to increase service delivery and efficiency, both internally and externally, and they will focus on reorganization and consolidation strategies, interoperability and improve the public safety communications infrastructure at the local, state and national levels. In 2005, Congress is expected to rewrite the 1996 telecommunications act, which has been rendered increasingly meaningless by developments in communications technology in recent years.

Foresight and Innovations The year 2005 may be known, for most states, as a year of fiscal and economic recovery, restructuring and cost-efficiency and multi-state collaboration to solve social and environmental problems. The year may also be seen as a period of coercive regulatory federalism with continuous preemption of state authorities and national standards and intervention. The most serious concern state policy-makers have, however, seems to be the proposed federal aid cuts and pending federal tax reform. Federal deficit-reduction efforts and additional tax cuts will inevitably affect state coffers negatively and put state policy-makers in difficult situations to find alternatives to decreasing intergovernmental transfers. The external and internal forces summarized above are based on more than 30 articles in Chapter One through Chapter Seven of the 2005 edition of The Book of the States. This edition also contains articles on more than 20 other areas in state government, including administration, public policy and programs. Topics of these articles range from libraries, licensure, motor vehicles, parks to homeland security, public safety, education, health care, energy, economic development, science and technology, transportation, parole and probation, welfare and interna-

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INTRODUCTION tional trade. Each of these articles highlight some of the most recent trends and issues state policy-makers and researchers on state government should be concerned about. To face up with aforementioned forces and these trends, state policy-makers should keep at least two things in mind: foresight and innovations. They must first realize we are living in a rapidly changing era; what was adequate yesterday might not be sufficient tomorrow. Now more than ever, state leaders and managers need to track the major forces that have the potential to change state priorities and operations. Second, there are compelling reasons for state officials to be more innovative. They may need new and different ways of managing agencies and deliver ser-

vices when they determine traditional and ongoing policies and programs are not working as well as they should. State decision-makers are expected to help each other across state borders by sharing their innovations. Moreover, the public expects to do more with less, especially during times of fiscal austerity like 2005 and 2006.

About the Author Keon S. Chi, editor-in-chief of The Book of the States, is a senior fellow for The Council of State Governments and professor of political science at Georgetown College. He has published extensively on state politics, policy and administration.

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Chapter One

STATE CONSTITUTIONS



STATE CONSTITUTIONS

State Constitutional Developments in 2004 By Janice C. May In 2004 state constitutions played an unusually important role in state and national affairs. A record number of amendments banned same-sex marriage and may have influenced the presidential election. Other significant issues were also addressed. But the long-term trend against comprehensive revision continued. Many important developments concerning state constitutions occurred in 2004. In retrospect, it was a remarkable year. Most publicized was the historic number of state constitutional amendments prohibiting same-sex marriage. Thirteen, all passing handily, were on the ballot in 2004, 11 in the November presidential election and two in special elections. There was speculation that the popularity of the amendments may have helped George W. Bush win the presidential election, particularly in the battleground state of Ohio where a win by John Kerry would have enabled him to receive enough electoral votes for the majority necessary to be president. Also of relevance to the presidential election was a proposed Colorado amendment to change the state’s winner-take-all method of allocating the state’s electoral votes to a proportional one. It was rejected but is a reminder that the Electoral College is constitutionally state based. Of national and world interest was the adoption of a California amendment to establish one of the world’s largest stem cell research programs. Also of considerable interest were tort reform propositions on the ballots in several states. Fiscal issues also commanded attention. A budget amendment in California was designed to assure passage of a $15 billion bond issue, the largest floated in U. S. municipal bond history. In contrast to specific changes, however, no general revision of state

constitutions took place by constitutional convention or other method. Rhode Island voters turned down the only convention call on the ballot.

Use of Authorized Methods Developments in 2004 appear to be consistent with a downward trend in state constitutional activity observed in recent years. State constitutional amendments proposed or adopted in 33 states, including Delaware where constitutional amendments are not referred to the voters. By comparison, in 2002, a general election year, 35 states participated. Also, the number of amendments proposed in 2004 was 140 compared with 175 in 2002 and 98 were adopted, rather than 118. Table A contains information by which other comparisons can be made. Except for 2004, the figures refer to biennia to facilitate comparison with similar tables published in The Book of the States since 1968-1969.

Legislative Proposal and Constitutional Initiatives As indicated in Table A, the legislative and constitutional initiative methods were the only ones used by the states in 2004. The legislative method, available in all states, continued to dominate the amendment process. The method accounted for over 77 percent of proposals and 82 percent of adoptions.

Table A: State Constitutional Changes by Method of Initiation: 1998–99, 2000–01, 2002–03 and 2004 Number of states involved Method of initiation All methods Legislative proposal Constitutional initiative Constitutional convention Constitutional commission

1998– 2000– 2002– 1999 2001 2003 2004 46 46 12 ... 1

40 38 10 ... ...

38 36 11 ... ...

33 30 12 ... ...

Total proposals

Total adopted

1998– 2000– 2002– 1999 2001 2003 2004 296 266 21 ... 9

212 180 32 ... ....

232 208 24 ... ...

140 109 31 ... ...

1998 1999

Percentage adopted

2000– 2002– 2001 2003 2004

229(b) 154 164 210(b) 141 155 11 13 9 ... ... ... 8 ... ...

98 81 17 ... ...

1998– 1999 77.2 (a)(b) 78.8 (a)(b) 52.4 ... ...

2000– 2001 72.0 (a) 91.0 (a) 40.6 ... ...

2002– 2003 2004 70.6 74.5 37.5 ... ...

70.0 74.3 54.8 ... ...

Source: Survey conducted by Janice May, University of Texas at Austin, January 2005. Key: . . . — Not applicable. (a)—In calculating these percentages, the amendments adopted in Delaware (where proposals are not submitted to the voters) are excluded. (b)—One Alabama amendment is excluded from adoptions because the election results were in dispute.

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STATE CONSTITUTIONS However, the constitutional initiative authorized in 18 states, proved to be more popular than usual. The number of states (12), proposals (31) and adoptions (17) were all high and the adoption rate (54.8 percent) was the highest. The boost in numbers can be attributed in large part to the six same-sex marriage initiatives, all of which passed.

Constitutional Conventions and Commissions In every state, the constitutional convention is the traditional method to draft new constitutions or substantially revise existing ones. But no convention has convened since the Rhode Island Convention of 1986. The prospects for a convention in Rhode Island and Colorado were considered in the last volume of The Book of the States. In neither state was a convention approved in 2004. Rhode Island voters rejected the referendum to call a convention at the November general election by a narrow margin (52 to 48 percent). The Rhode Island Constitution requires a vote on the issue at least every 10 years. At the same election the voters approved an amendment to reshape the constitutional distribution of powers among the three branches of government to a more traditional separation of powers structure. They had approved a nonbinding referendum in 2000 for a convention on the separation of powers issue. It is reasonable to conclude that at least some voters were satisfied with the resolution of the issue and a convention was unnecessary. The campaign focused on issues that might be considered in an unlimited convention. Those in favor supported the possibility of new reforms; those opposed were concerned about costs and undesirable changes. In Colorado no action was taken on the convention question in the 2004 legislative session. The legislature was deeply divided over the resolution of a serious fiscal crisis and other issues and no consensus for a convention was likely in this political atmosphere. Research underway on conventions was discontinued. In New Jersey, the prospects for a constitutional convention in the near future were improved with the passage in 2004 of legislation creating the Property Tax Convention Task Force. Property tax reform has been an issue for many years in the state and the idea of a convention has been considered as the best way to bring about needed reforms. Former Gov. James McGreevey, a strong advocate of reform, backed the convention option. The task force was composed of 15 members, nine members appointed by the governor and the others by legislative leaders. Four were members of the New 4

The Book of the States 2005

Jersey Legislature. The body was charged with “considering and developing recommendations regarding the process of conducting a constitutional convention designed to change the existing property tax system.” Following an organizational session in September, nine public hearings were held to encourage public participation, among other activities. The final report was submitted on the last day of December. The task force recommendations were numerous. They began with an emphasis on strictly limiting the convention to property tax reform. They proposed that a vote on the convention call be scheduled for the 2005 general election and at the same election non-partisan election of delegates should take place. The convention should be held as soon as possible after the election and end in July 2006. The convention’s proposals were to be submitted at the 2006 general election in the form of a single comprehensive ballot measure in which separate proposals could be incorporated. The most unusual recommendation was the group’s preference for convention authority over both statutory and constitutional property tax changes. To implement the recommendation, a temporary constitutional amendment to allow consideration of statutory changes would have to be proposed by the legislature for voter approval. Creation of a task force to advise the legislature on the process of holding a convention is a fresh approach to constitutional change. Although it performed some of the services of a constitutional commission, it is not regarded as a commission, a common purpose of which is to propose substantive reforms. It is of interest that bills have been introduced in the 2005 New Jersey Legislature to carry out task force recommendations Table A refers to constitutional commissions as a method of changing state constitutions. The only commissions included are Florida commissions which have the unique power to refer proposals directly to the voters. These commissions are created periodically and none of them were in operation in 2004. In 2004, the only constitutional commission in operation was the Utah Constitutional Revision Commission, which was established on a permanent basis in 1977 (see Table 1.5).

Substantive Changes Substantive changes in the form of a new constitution were not on the ballot in 2004. Not since the 1980s have new constitutions been proposed or adopted. Also missing was comprehensive revision, either substantive or editorial, of an existing constitution. However, Rhode Island voters approved a


STATE CONSTITUTIONS substantial change by the adoption of an amendment on separation of powers. The ballot language made clear that the amendment’s intent was to ensure the separation of powers among the three branches of government. To this end, four articles were amended. In general the powers of the state legislature were reduced and the governor’s power enhanced, most particularly over appointments. In the absence of general revision of constitutions, it is common to propose editorial revision of some kind. In 2004 “clean-up” amendments repealing a few provisions were approved in Colorado and Nevada. Editorial revision is usually non-controversial. Somewhat of a surprise was the defeat of an Alabama amendment that would have deleted provisions on racial segregation in the public schools, prohibiting a right to education and several references to the poll tax. The change was recommended in 2003 by the Alabama Citizens’ Constitution Commission. Opponents argued that it would lead to federal intervention and increased taxes. The initial vote was so close that a recount was ordered. Table B contains information on the number of proposed and adopted state constitutional amendments by articles common to state constitutions. Except for 2004, the figures apply to biennia so that comparisons can be made to tables published in earlier volumes of The Book of the States. The table can serve as a rough guide to changes over a period of years in the framework of state government, including rights and elections in addition to the three branches of government and local government, and the various policies that are part of state constitutions.

Framework of Government Proposals to prohibit same-sex marriage were the most numerous and most significant of amendments pertaining to state constitutional rights in 2004. Eleven were before the voters in the November 2 general election (Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon and Utah) and two in special elections (Louisiana, Missouri). All passed by comfortable to large margins. Adding four measures adopted in previous years, Alaska, Hawaii, Nebraska and Nevada, 16 ban same-sex marriage and Hawaii reserves to the legislature the power to do so. In at least three more states (Massachusetts, Tennessee and Wisconsin) the proposal is expected to be on the ballot in 2005 or 2006. It is widely believed that a key factor in the large number of same-sex amendments in 2004 was a reaction to the ruling in 2003 by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court that prohib-

iting same-sex marriages denies basic rights under the state constitution. This was a signal that only by amending the state constitution could the same-sex marriage prohibition be secure under state law. Most of the proposals (at least five in 2004 and all four of the earlier ones) have amended the Bill of Rights (or Declaration of Rights) in state constitutions. To those who believe that denial of marriage to samesex couples is a violation of constitutional rights, this must seem ironic. The location in the Bill or Rights might be simply a directive to the courts that gay marriage is not a right or it may be a return to an earlier view of community rights. Historically, the ban on interracial marriage was placed in the constitutions of six of the 16 states in which the ban was law.1 In none was the provision in the state bill of rights. Although the state constitution is the highest state law, it is still possible for a constitutional proposal to violate it. For example, soon after Louisiana voters approved the same-sex marriage amendment, it was declared unconstitutional by a Louisiana court for violating the constitution’s single subject rule. The amendment not only prohibited same-sex marriage but also civil unions, two different subjects according to the court. The case is on appeal. It is more common to argue that the marriage amendments could violate the U.S. Constitution. As reported in the 2004 edition of The Book of the States, this was the ruling of a federal district court in a case challenging the Nebraska ban. The court held that the bar amounted to an unconstitutional bill of attainder, among other arguments. The most likely provision of the U.S. Constitution to be relevant, however, is the “equal protection clause” of the 14th Amendment. The marriage prohibition may be in violation of the clause, but even if it is sustained, other provisions of the amendments might violate it. Nine of the laws of the state amendments do more than limit a marriage to one man and one woman (Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma and Utah). They also prohibit other unions or domestic partnerships that give benefits equivalent to marriage. In the case of Romer v. Evans (517 U.S. 620 [1996]), the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that persons on the basis of their sexual orientation could not be denied the same rights as others to use politic processes to pursue their political goals. The argument has been made that the nine amendments deny persons the right to use political methods to retain or add benefits of a civil union or domestic partnership without having to amend the state constitutions. The gay marriage amendments also raise the question of recognizing such marriages from other states The Council of State Governments

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STATE CONSTITUTIONS or jurisdictions. Whether this is a violation of the “full faith and credit clause” of Article IV of the U.S. Constitution will eventually have to be resolved by the U.S. Supreme Court. To date, the only U.S. Supreme Court action on the issue was to deny review of a U.S. Court of Appeals decision to reject a challenge to the constitutionality of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court’s ruling on same-sex marriage based on the “republican form of government clause” of Article IV of the U.S. Constitution.2 Litigation is under way in many states either to support or oppose same-sex marriage. The state constitutions and courts will continue to play an important role in its resolution. Among the amendments of most interest to the states and nation were those proposing reform of the civil justice system, a major responsibility of the states in the federal system. The trend seems to be one of more constitutional proposals to change the system but a mixed record of success. Tort reform amendments to cap non-economic damage in medical malpractice cases, similar to the one approved in Texas in 2004 (see the last volume of The Book of the States) failed to pass in Oregon and Wyoming. But a third proposal to remove limits on damages in suits against construction companies failed in Colorado, the effect of which was to retain restrictions. Also defeated was a lengthy constitutional initiative measure in Nevada to punish attorneys for filing frivolous law suits. However a limit on attorney fees in medical practice cases was passed in Florida, as was a Wyoming amendment to allow the legislature

to require alternative dispute resolution or review by a medical panel before suits could be filed against health providers. Three Florida proposals, all passing, were of relevance to medical malpractice. Doctors who had committed three or more incidents of malpractice were barred from the practice of medicine in the state. The other two allowed access to medical records by patients or their families when medical error led to injury or death, and the public was entitled to information on “adverse medical incidents” caused by a health care provider or facility. The intensity of interest in medical malpractice cases was well illustrated in Oregon by the narrow margin of defeat and also by the numerous arguments for and against printed in the Oregon Voters’ Pamphlet. Proponents emphasized the need to reduce the high costs of law suits, high medical insurance rates and the loss of doctors. The opposition was concerned about the erosion of the right to a trial by jury and access to the courts and blamed insurance companies rather than the courts and lawyers for high insurance costs. Both the governor and attorney general opposed the measure. Contributing to the large number of state constitutional amendments concerned with rights were several others in addition to same-sex marriage and tort reform. The most unique was the right to study stem cell research, adopted in California. More traditional was another California proposal, one that elevated the statutory right of public access to government information to constitutional status; it also passed. The trend toward creating a constitutional right to

Table B: Substantive Changes in State Constitutions: Proposed and Adopted: 2000–01, 2002–03 and 2004 Total proposed Subject Matter Proposals of statewide applicability Bill of Rights Suffrage & elections Legislative branch Executive branch Judicial branch Local government Finance & taxation State & local debt State functions Amendment & revision General revision proposals Miscellaneous proposals Local amendments

2000–01

2002–03

162 (a) 4 6 37 9 7 (a) 9 38 5 24 3 0 20 (c) 50

191 12 6 24 8 19 5 65 10 16 3 0 23 (c) 41

Total adopted 2004

2000–01

2002–03

113 (b) 12 (f) 9 14 4 8 2 29 3 14 (b) 1 0 17 (c)(g) 27

114 (b) 1 4 27 7 8 6 25 5 17 0 0 14 40

128 8 3 17 4 11 5 39 5 13 3 0 20 (c) 36

Source: Survey conducted by Janice May, University of Texas at Austin, January 2005. Key: (a)—Excludes Delaware where proposals are not submitted to voters. (b)—Includes Delaware. (c)—Includes amendments that contain substantial editorial revision.

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Percentage adopted 2004 81 (b) 12 (f) 6 6 3 3 2 22 3 8(b) 1 0 15 (c)(g) 17

2000–01 2002–03 70.3 (a)(e) 25.0 66.6 72.9 77.7 100.0 66.6 65.5 100.0 70.8 0.0 0.0 70.0 80.0

67.0 66.6 50.0 70.8 50.0 57.8 100.0 60.0 50.0 81.2 100.0 0.0 86.0 87.8

2004 71.6 (b)(c)(f)(g) 100.0 66.6 42.8 75.0 37.5 100.0 75.8 100.0 57.1 100.0 0.0 88.2 62.9

(d)—Excludes one Alabama amendment in a legal dispute at the time. (e)—Excludes one Oregon amendment not canvassed by court order. (f)—Includes a Georgia amendment adopted by voters but in litigation in 2004. (g)—Includes a Louisiana amendment adopted by voters but in litigation in 2004.


STATE CONSTITUTIONS hunt and fish continued with its adoption in two more states, Louisiana and Montana. In Hawaii, four changes in the criminal justice system were passed, among them allowing prosecutors to file charges by information. The only one to reduce rights was a Florida amendment requiring parental notification before a minor could have an abortion. The only one on this list to fail was a South Dakota amendment to extend transportation and food assistance to all school children, including those in religious schools. Also recently adopted (in 2003) was protection of free speech added to the Delaware Bill of Rights. It was inadvertently omitted from the last volume of The Book of the States. The year 2004 turned out to be a significant one for proposals to change election provisions in state constitutions. Because it could conceivably affect the outcome of the current presidential election, a Colorado proposal to change the method of allocating the state’s electoral votes for president and vice president was the most significant, nationally. The state’s winner-take-all method would be replaced by a proportional distribution of the votes on the basis of the percentage of the popular vote received by each candidate. The new method would have applied, if passed, to the 2004 election. The amendment was soundly defeated. Had it been adopted it undoubtedly would have been challenged as a violation of Section 1 of Article II of the U.S. Constitution, which provides that electors shall be “appointed in such a manner as the Legislature thereof may direct.” The Colorado measure was proposed by a constitutional initiative and was not a decision made by the state legislature. In California the voters decided to retain the closed primary that was challenged by supporters of a modified blanket primary, one distinguishing feature of which was the possibility of two candidates from the same party for a given office to advance to the general election. Oregon voters approved an unusual provision to postpone an election if a nominee for a given office died 30 days before the election. The postponement would enable the voters to elect the replacement instead of having an appointed or a holdover officer serve. Also of importance was the adoption in New Mexico of run-off elections in large cities (over 20,000) to replace the plurality vote currently required. Other propositions proposed changes to the initiative and referendum. With one important exception the amendments would make it more difficult to use the process by placing new restrictions. The most far-reaching of these was an Arizona amend-

ment. An initiative measure that requires new spending must identify the source of funding, such as a tax increase or fees without drawing from the general fund. The legislature is allowed to make cuts if revenues are insufficient. Opponents argued that it would unduly interfere with the public’s right to influence public policy. Supporters contended that the legislature cannot balance the budget when spending is beyond its control. Two other amendments, only one of which passed, set earlier dates for submission of petitions. Voters approved an Alaska measure to increase the number of districts and signatures required to submit a petition. The only exception to the new restrictions was the approval by Nebraska voters of an amendment to increase the effectiveness of an initiative by requiring a two-thirds vote of the legislature to change a measure adopted by the initiative process. Amendments were proposed in 2004 to change the structure or procedures of all three branches of state government. A little over half were adopted. The Rhode Island reform of separation of powers was the most substantial of the proposals as already noted. In contrast, most of the other significant changes were rejected. Ballot measures that passed tended to fill gaps in existing provisions or clarify confusion over others. Of the legislative amendments, attempts to change term limits by extending the number of years legislators could serve met with defeat in Arkansas and Montana. Another proposal, also rejected, would have removed the Nebraska lieutenant governor as presiding officer of the unicameral state legislature and power over ties. Although the office is one of little or no legislative power, voters are reluctant to abolish it. Virginia voters agreed to modification of reapportionment laws to avoid double or no representation of residents in certain districts. It allowed state legislators and U. S. representatives to complete their elected terms before newly drawn districts became effective. Also, to fill a gap voters approved a measure to give the Utah Legislature power to call itself into session for impeachment purposes. Among the few executive branch ballot measures was a Colorado amendment to strengthen the governor’s power of appointment over state employees, which was rejected. It would have removed 140 positions from the civil service system, which has enjoyed constitutional status since 1918. To fill a gap in procedures Virginia voters approved an amendment recommended by the governor’s Make Virginia Secure Panel, a post 9/11 homeland security body. It enlarges the list of officers who can succeed to the office of governor in the event of an emergency, including a The Council of State Governments

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STATE CONSTITUTIONS terrorist attack, and permit the lower house to convene to elect an acting governor and, if necessary, to waive eligibility requirements. Also passing was an Indiana proposition to determine who is to serve as governor when both the office of governor and lieutenant governor are vacant. State judicial branches were changed very little by amendment in 2004 despite efforts to do so. Voters defeated a South Dakota amendment that would have extended merit selection of judges from the Supreme Court to the circuit courts, the second tier of courts in the unified judicial system. In New Hampshire voters defeated for the second time an amendment to resolve a separation of powers dispute between the legislature and the courts over authority to make rules regarding judicial administration and procedures. A majority of voters said yes, but two-thirds vote is required. Two ballot measures that passed concerned the office of justice of the peace in Arizona and magistrates (successors to the justice of the peace) in North Carolina. One confirmed that temporary justices of the peace do not have to be attorneys and the other set terms for the magistrates for the first time. Major changes in local government structure and procedures were not the subject of amendments in 2004. The most important change for local governments related to fiscal policy.

Policy In 2004 fiscal policy was the subject of more amendments to state constitutions than any other policy, the trend for many years. Although the performance of the economy improved, budget problems in the states were common. The most serious state budget difficulties were faced in California where deficits have been as high as $62 billion in recent years. In 2004 the governor and the legislature agreed to borrow more money to resolve current short-term problems and to allow some breathing space for a final solution. The result was a proposed bond issue of $15 billion, the largest floated in municipal bond history. The bond issue itself, approved by the voters, was not in the form of a constitutional amendment. Since 1962, the state’s constitution has prohibited the inclusion of bond issues; they must be proposed to the voters as statutes or bond acts. But a companion constitutional amendment, said to “be joined at the hip” to the bond issue was adopted. Called the Balanced Budget Act, it was not effective unless the bond passed. It provided for a reserve fund for the purpose of avoiding future budget crises and a minor change that requires the final budget to be balanced, not just the governor’s proposed in January. 8

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Four other California amendment proposals were relevant to the budget. Rejected by the voters was a measure to reduce the legislative vote required to pass the budget from two-thirds to 55 percent. California is one of only three states with a super-majority vote. Two competing amendments, one referred to the voters by the legislature and the other by a constitutional initiative petition, would, if passed, make substantial changes in state-local fiscal relationships. Their relevance to the budget is that the state government has been exercising its authority over local taxes to use some of the revenues to pay for state costs and help reduce state budget deficits. The amendment proposed by the legislature was adopted. One result is that the state can no longer rely on local tax revenues to balance the budget, except in an emergency. The fourth amendment, which passed, dedicated revenues from the sales of state surplus property to paying interest and principal on the $15 billion bonds issue. Constitutional amendments relating to taxes outnumbered others on fiscal policy. No major reforms to increase taxes comparable to the Alabama amendment defeated in 2003 were on the ballot. (See the 2004 edition of The Book of the States for information about the Alabama amendment.) New or increased taxes were notably absent from measures passed to resolve the budget crisis in California. (The vehicle license fee was reduced for a loss of $7 billion.) However, major changes in tax policy were proposed by the aforementioned California amendments on state-local fiscal relationships. According to the California legislative analyst, both measures proposed a substantial reduction of state authority over local taxes and would over time possibly increase local revenues by billions of dollars with a corresponding loss of state revenues. All three of the major local taxes (sales, property and vehicle license fee) would be affected. In addition changes were made to lessen the financial burden of state mandates on local governments. A primary difference between the two constitutional proposals was that the initiative version, which was rejected, required a statewide vote before the legislature could approve certain local tax changes. The few constitutional tax increases on the ballot were limited to specific purposes: in Colorado, higher taxes on cigarettes and tobacco products to improve public health; in West Virginia legislative authorization to impose or raise taxes to finance bonds to pay for bonuses and death benefits to veterans of recent conflicts; and in California, a surcharge on monthly telephone bills to help pay for emergency health care. The California amendment was the only one to be rejected. Although not a tax increase, Missouri vot-


STATE CONSTITUTIONS ers approved a significant dedication of motor fuels tax to highways and roads. As usual, the property tax measures were the most popular and numerous and invariably reduced rather than raised taxes. All eight on the ballot were approved. Veterans were given exemptions of one kind or another in New Mexico and Oklahoma. Also congruent with past trends was the approval of bonds authorized by constitutional amendment. In the four states with such amendments all were approved, three were for economic development and one for veteran benefits. Another continuation of past developments was the approval of funds to support specific projects or programs. In 2004, they included noxious weed eradication, a trust fund for lotteries, and promotion of seafood products (all passed). Gambling enterprises and lotteries are often put forward as alternatives to taxes or as a source of new tax revenue. It seems appropriate to consider them as a component of fiscal policy although other issues are relevant. Nine propositions in six states (California, Florida, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska and Oklahoma) were on the 2004 ballot, possibly a record number. The two lottery amendments (Nebraska and Oklahoma) were adopted and two of the gambling measures (Florida and Michigan). Oklahoma became the 42nd state to approve a state lottery. Although the lottery itself was adopted as a statute, a companion Lottery Trust Fund was created by constitutional amendment. In common with lotteries in many other states, the revenues are dedicated to education. All state constitutions contain provisions on public education, a primary responsibility of the states in the federal system. Education provisions are frequently amended, but in 2004 no major reforms were on the ballots. A number of amendments already reviewed contributed to the funding of education, such as the previously mentioned Oklahoma Lottery. North Carolina added proceeds from civil penalties. In response to budgetary difficulties last year, voters gave the first approval to a Nevada proposition to consider education first in the appropriations process. (See the 2004 edition of The Book of the States for more information.) But raising school expenditures to the national average failed. Among other proposals already reviewed was the South Dakota measure to provide transportation and food assistance to private schools. Amendments to the Arizona and Utah constitutions would permit intellectual property developed by state universities to be transferred or exchanged for stock in private companies. Only the Utah version passed. Of the many other policy amendments, the most unusual and significant was the California measure

to promote stem cell research. It would establish one of the world’s largest stem cell research programs as already noted. A new medical institution would be created. Financing would be provided by the sale of bonds. Projected annual expenditures would exceed current federal government spending on stem cell research and research on human reproductive cloning would be prohibited. Among other policy amendments were: adoption of a minimum wage in Florida and the first of two approvals in Nevada; repeal of a Florida amendment authorizing a high-speed railroad; approval of a change in alcohol regulation in South Carolina whose constitution contains a separate article on alcohol regulation; repeal of an obsolete Delaware provision on types of consideration received by corporations for stock issues; and defeat of a Arizona amendment to exchange state trust land for federal land to protect open space and help military bases. This was the fifth defeat for a land exchange measure in that state. Research Note The Center for State Constitutional Studies at Rutgers University, Camden, continues to provide current information on state constitutions and support research activities and conferences. In 2004 the Center published a series of background papers for the New Jersey Property Tax Convention Task Force. The papers are posted on the Center’s Web site, www.camlaw.rutgers.edu/statecon.

Notes Loving v. Virginia, 338 U.S. 1 (1967) p. 6 N. 3 Largess v. Massachusetts Supreme Court. U.S. Supreme Court. Case No. 04-420. 73 U.S.L.W. 3318 (Nov. 30, 2004). 1

2

References “Annual Issue on State Constitutional Law.” Rutgers Law Journal. 20 (Summer 1989) to 34 (Summer 2003). The Report of the Property Tax Convention Task Force to the Governor and Legislature. A Plan to Hold a Property Tax Convention. Finding a Fairer System. The State of New Jersey. December 31, 2004. “State Constitutional Commentary.” Albany Law Review. 67 (2004) 637. (Annual Issue since 1996) “Symposium on Tomorrow’s Issues in State Constitutional Law.” Valparaiso University Law Review. 38 (Spring 2004) 317.

About the Author Janice C. May is professor emeritus of government at the University of Texas at Austin, where she specializes in state government and politics. A regular contributor to The Book of the States, she is the author of numerous publications on the Texas Constitution and government, including The Texas State Constitution: A Reference Guide, and on state constitutional development nationwide. She has served on two Texas constitutional commissions and on the board of directors of the Texas State Bar.

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STATE CONSTITUTIONS

Table 1.1 GENERAL INFORMATION ON STATE CONSTITUTIONS (As of January 1, 2005) Effective date of present constitution

Number of amendments

State or other jurisdiction

Number of constitutions*

Alabama ......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ........................... Arkansas ........................ California .......................

6 1 1 5 2

1819, 1861, 1865, 1868, 1875, 1901 1956 1911 1836, 1861, 1864, 1868, 1874 1849, 1879

Nov. 28, 1901 Jan. 3, 1959 Feb. 14, 1912 Oct. 30, 1874 July 4, 1879

Colorado ........................ Connecticut .................... Delaware ........................ Florida ............................ Georgia ...........................

1 4 4 6 10

1876 1818 (f), 1965 1776, 1792, 1831, 1897 1839, 1861, 1865, 1868, 1886, 1968 1777, 1789, 1798, 1861, 1865, 1868, 1877, 1945, 1976, 1982

Aug. 1, 1876 Dec. 30, 1965 June 10, 1897 Jan. 7, 1969 July 1,1983

74,522 (b) 17,256 (b) 19,000 51,456 (b) 39,526 (b)

304 30 (e) 135 83 (g)

145 29 138 104 63 (g)

1950 1889 1818, 1848, 1870, 1970 1816, 1851 1846, 1857

Aug. 21, 1959 July 3, 1890 July 1, 1971 Nov. 1, 1851 Sept. 3, 1857

20,774 (b) 24,232 (b) 16,510 (b) 10,379 (b) 12,616 (b)

123 204 17 78 57

104 117 11 46 52 (i)

Jan. 29, 1861 Sept. 28, 1891 Jan. 1, 1975

12,296(b) 23,911 (b) 54,112 (b)

122 75 189

92 (i) 41 129

March 15, 1820 Oct. 5, 1867

16,276 (b) 46,600 (b)

201 254

169 (j) 218 (k)

Hawaii ............................ Idaho ............................... Illinois ............................. Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................

1 (h) 1 4 2 2

Dates of adoption

Estimated length (number of words) 340,136 (a)(b)(c) 15,988 (b) 28,876 59,500 (b) 54,645

Submitted to voters

Adopted

1,063 41 246 189 860

766 29 136 91 (d) 513

Kansas ............................ Kentucky ........................ Louisiana .......................

1 4 11

Maine .............................. Maryland .......................

1 4

1859 1792, 1799, 1850, 1891 1812, 1845, 1852, 1861, 1864, 1868, 1879, 1898, 1913, 1921, 1974 1819 1776, 1851, 1864, 1867

Massachusetts ............... Michigan ........................ Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

1 4 1 4 4

1780 1835, 1850, 1908, 1963 1857 1817, 1832, 1869, 1890 1820, 1865, 1875, 1945

Oct. 25, 1780 Jan. 1, 1964 May 11, 1858 Nov. 1, 1890 March 30,1945

36,700 (l) 34,659 (b) 11,547 (b) 24,323 (b) 42,600 (b)

148 63 213 158 165

120 25 118 123 105

Montana ......................... Nebraska ........................ Nevada ............................ New Hampshire ............. New Jersey .....................

2 2 1 2 3

1889, 1972 1866, 1875 1864 1776, 1784 1776, 1844, 1947

July 1, 1973 Oct. 12, 1875 Oct. 31, 1864 June 2, 1784 Jan. 1, 1948

13,145 (b) 20,048 31,377 (b) 9,200 22,956 (b)

53 336 (m) 220 285 (n) 69

30 222 (m) 132 143 36

New Mexico ................... New York ........................ North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ................................

1 4 3 1 2

1911 1777, 1822, 1846, 1894 1776, 1868, 1970 1889 1802, 1851

Jan. 6, 1912 Jan. 1, 1895 July 1, 1971 Nov. 2, 1889 Sept. 1, 1851

27,200 51,700 16,532 (b) 19,130 (b) 48,521 (b)

280 290 42 258 267

151 216 34 145 (o) 161

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ............................ Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

1 1 5 3 7

1907 1857 1776, 1790, 1838, 1873, 1968 (r) 1842 (f) 1986 (s) 1776, 1778, 1790, 1861, 1865, 1868, 1895

Nov. 16, 1907 Feb. 14, 1859 1968 (r) Dec. 4, 1986 Jan. 1, 1896

74,075 (b) 54,083 (b) 27,711 (b) 10,908 (b) 22,300

335 (p) 473 (q) 36(r) 8 (s) 672 (t)

171 (p) 238 (q) 30 (r) 8 (s) 485 (t)

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas ............................... Utah ................................ Vermont .........................

1 3 5 (u) 1 3

1889 1796, 1835, 1870 1845, 1861, 1866, 1869, 1876 1895 1777, 1786, 1793

Nov. 2, 1889 Feb. 23, 1870 Feb. 15, 1876 Jan. 4, 1896 July 9, 1793

27,675 (b) 13,300 90,000 11,000 10,286 (b)

219 59 605 (v) 157 211

212 36 432 106 53

Virginia .......................... Washington .................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ....................... Wyoming ........................

6 1 2 1 1

1776, 1830, 1851, 1869, 1902, 1970 1889 1863, 1872 1848 1889

July 1, 1971 Nov. 11, 1889 April 9, 1872 May 29, 1848 July 10, 1890

21,319 (b) 33,564 (b) 26,000 14,392 (b) 31,800

48 168 120 181 120

40 95 71 133 (i) 94

American Samoa ........... No. Mariana Islands ..... Puerto Rico ....................

2 1 1

1960, 1967 1977 1952

July 1, 1967 Jan. 9, 1978 July 25, 1952

6,000 11,000 9,281

See footnotes at end of table.

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14 55 6

7 51 (w)(x) 6


STATE CONSTITUTIONS

GENERAL INFORMATION ON STATE CONSTITUTIONS — Continued Source: Janice May, The University of Texas at Austin and The Council of State Governments, January 2005. *The constitutions referred to in this table include those Civil War documents customarily listed by the individual states. (a) The Alabama constitution includes numerous local amendments that apply to only one county. An estimated 70 percent of all amendments are local. A 1982 amendment provides that after proposal by the legislature to which special procedures apply, only a local vote (with exceptions) is necessary to add them to the constitution. (b) Computer word count. (c) The total number of Alabama amendments includes one that is commonly overlooked. (d) Eight of the approved amendments have been superseded and are not printed in the current edition of the constitution. The total adopted does not include five amendments proposed and adopted since statehood. (e) Proposed amendments are not submitted to the voters in Delaware. (f) Colonial charters with some alterations served as the first constitutions in Connecticut (1638, 1662) and in Rhode Island (1663). (g) The Georgia constitution requires amendments to be of general and uniform application throughout the state, thus eliminating local amendments that accounted for most of the amendments before 1982. (h) As a kingdom and republic, Hawaii had five constitutions. (i) The figure includes amendments approved by the voters and later nullified by the state supreme court in Iowa (three), Kansas (one), Nevada (six) and Wisconsin (two). (j) The figure does not include one amendment approved by the voters in 1967 that is inoperative until implemented by legislation. (k) Two sets of identical amendments were on the ballot and adopted in the 1992 Maryland election. The four amendments are counted as two in the table. (l) The printed constitution includes many provisions that have been annulled. The length of effective provisions is an estimated 24,122 words (12,400 annulled in Massachusetts, and in Rhode Island before the rewrite of the con-

stitution in 1986, it was 11,399 words (7,627 annulled). (m) The 1998 and 2000 Nebraska ballots allowed the voters to vote separately on parts of propositions. In 1998, 10 of 18 separate propositions were adopted; in 2000, 6 of 9. (n) The constitution of 1784 was extensively revised in 1792. Figure shows proposals and adoptions since the constitution was adopted in 1784. (o) The figures do not include submission and approval of the constitution of 1889 itself and of Article XX; these are constitutional questions included in some counts of constitutional amendments and would add two to the figure in each column. (p) The figures include five amendments submitted to and approved by the voters which were, by decisions of the Oklahoma or U.S. Supreme Courts, rendered inoperative or ruled invalid, unconstitutional, or illegally submitted. (q) One Oregon amendment on the 2000 ballot was not counted as approved because canvassing was enjoined by the courts. (r) Certain sections of the constitution were revised by the limited convention of 1967–68. Amendments proposed and adopted are since 1968. (s) Following approval of the eight amendments and a rewrite of the Rhode Island Constitution in 1986, the constitution has been called the 1986 Constitution. Amendments since 1986 total eight proposed and eight adopted. Otherwise, the total is 106 proposals and 60 adopted. (t) In 1981 approximately two-thirds of 626 proposed and four-fifths of the adopted amendments were local. Since then the amendments have been statewide propositions. (u) The Constitution of the Republic of Texas preceded five state constitutions. (v) The number of proposed amendments to the Texas Constitution excludes three proposed by the legislature but not placed on the ballot. (w) By 1992, 49 amendments had been proposed and 47 adopted. Since then, one was proposed but rejected in 1994, all three proposals were ratified in 1996 and in 1998, of two proposals one was adopted. (x) The total excludes one amendment ruled void by a federal district court.

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STATE CONSTITUTIONS

Table 1.2 CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT PROCEDURE: BY THE LEGISLATURE Constitutional Provisions State or other jurisdiction

Legislative vote required for proposal (a)

Consideration by two sessions required

Vote required for ratification

Limitation on the number of amendments submitted at one election

Alabama ..................... Alaska ......................... Arizona ....................... Arkansas .................... California ...................

3/5 2/3 Majority Majority 2/3

No No No No No

Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment

None None None 3 None

Colorado .................... Connecticut ................ Delaware .................... Florida ........................ Georgia .......................

2/3 (c) 2/3 3/5 2/3

No (c) Yes No No

Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Not required Majority vote on amendment (d) Majority vote on amendment

None (b) None No referendum None None

Hawaii ........................ Idaho ........................... Illinois ......................... Indiana ....................... Iowa ............................

(e) 2/3 3/5 Majority Majority

(e) No No Yes Yes

Majority vote on amendment (f) Majority vote on amendment (g) Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment

None None 3 articles None None

Kansas ........................ Kentucky .................... Louisiana ................... Maine .......................... Maryland ...................

2/3 3/5 2/3 2/3 (i) 3/5

No No No No No

Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment (h) Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment

5 4 None None None

Massachusetts ........... Michigan .................... Minnesota .................. Mississippi ................. Missouri .....................

Majority (j) 2/3 Majority 2/3 (k) Majority

Yes No No No No

Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote in election Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment

None None None None None

Montana ..................... Nebraska .................... Nevada ........................ New Hampshire ......... New Jersey .................

2/3 (i) 3/5 Majority 3/5 (l)

No No Yes No (l)

Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment (f) Majority vote on amendment 2/3 vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment

None None None None None (m)

New Mexico ............... New York .................... North Carolina .......... North Dakota ............ Ohio ............................

Majority (n) Majority 3/5 Majority 3/5

No Yes No No No

Majority vote on amendment (n) Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment

None None None None None

Oklahoma .................. Oregon ........................ Pennsylvania ............. Rhode Island ............. South Carolina ..........

Majority (o) Majority (p) Majority 2/3 (q)

No No Yes (p) No Yes (q)

Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment (p) Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment

None None None None None

South Dakota ............. Tennessee ................... Texas ........................... Utah ............................ Vermont .....................

Majority (r) 2/3 2/3 (t)

No Yes (r) No No Yes

Majority vote on amendment Majority vote in election (s) Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment

None None None None None

Virginia ...................... Washington ................ West Virginia ............. Wisconsin ................... Wyoming ....................

Majority 2/3 2/3 Majority 2/3

Yes No No Yes No

Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment Majority vote in election

None None None None None

American Samoa ....... No. Mariana Islands .... Puerto Rico ................

2/3 3/4 2/3 (v)

No No No

Majority vote on amendment (u) Majority vote on amendment Majority vote on amendment

None None 3

See footnotes at end of table.

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STATE CONSTITUTIONS

CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT PROCEDURE: BY THE LEGISLATURE — Continued Source: Survey conducted by Janice May, University of Texas at Austin and The Council of State Governments, January 2005. Key: (a) In all states not otherwise noted, the figure shown in the column refers to the proportion of elected members in each house required for appro val of proposed constitutional amendments. (b) Legislature may not propose amendments to more than six articles of the constitution in the same legislative session. (c) Three-fourths vote in each house at one session, or majority vote in each house in two sessions between which an election has intervened. (d) Majority vote on amendment except amendment for new state tax or fee not in effect on Nov. 7, 1994 requires two-thirds of voters in the election. (e) Two-thirds vote in each house at one session, or majority vote in each house in two sessions. (f) Majority vote on amendment must be at least 50 percent of the total votes cast at the election (at least 35 percent in Nebraska); or, at a special election, a majority of the votes tallied which must be at least 30 percent of the total number of registered voters. (g) Majority voting in election or three-fifths voting on amendment. (h) If five or fewer political subdivisions of the state are affected, majority in state as a whole and also in affected subdivisions) is required. (i) Two-thirds of both houses. (j) Majority of members elected sitting in joint session. (k) The two-thirds must include not less than a majority elected to each house. (l) Three-fifths of all members of each house at one session, or majority of all members of each house for two successive sessions. (m) If a proposed amendment is not approved at the election when submit-

ted, neither the same amendment nor one which would make substantially the same change for the constitution may be again submitted to the people before the third general election thereafter. (n) Amendments concerning certain elective franchise and education matters require three-fourths vote of members elected and approval by threefourths off electors voting in state and two-thirds of those voting in each county. (o) Majority vote to amend constitution, two-thirds to revise (revise includes all or a part of the constitution). (p) Emergency amendments may be passed by two-thirds vote of each house, followed by ratification by majority vote of electors in election held at least one month after legislative approval. There is an exception for an amendment containing a supermajority voting requirement, which must be ratified by an equal supermajority. (q) Two-thirds of members of each house, first passage; majority of members of each house after popular ratification. (r) Majority of members elected to both houses, first passage; two-thirds of members elected to both houses, second passage. (s) Majority of all citizens voting for governor. (t) Two-thirds vote senate, majority vote house, first passage; majority both houses, second passage. As of 1974, amendments may be submitted only every four years. (u) Within 30 days after voter approval, governor must submit amendment(s) to U.S. Secretary of the Interior for approval. (v) If approved by two-thirds of members of each house, amendment(s) submitted to voters at special referendum; if approved by not less than threefourths of total members of each house, referendum may be held at next general election.

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STATE CONSTITUTIONS

Table 1.3 CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENT PROCEDURE: BY INITIATIVE Constitutional Provisions State or other jurisdiction

Number of signatures required on initiative petition

Distribution of signatures

Referendum vote

Arizona ..........................

15% of total votes cast for all candidates for governor at last election.

None specified.

Majority vote on amendment.

Arkansas .......................

10% of voters for governor at last election.

Must include 5% of voters for governor in each of 15 counties.

Majority vote on amendment.

California ......................

8% of total voters for all candidates for governor at last election.

None specified.

Majority vote on amendment.

Colorado .......................

5% of total legal votes for all candidates for secretary of state at last general election.

None specified.

Majority vote on amendment.

Florida ...........................

8% of total votes cast in the state in the last election for presidential electors.

8% of total votes cast in each of 1/2 of the congressional districts.

Majority vote on amendment except amendment for new state tax or fee not in effect Nov. 7, 1994 requires 2/3 of voters voting in election.

Illinois (a) ......................

8% of total votes cast for candidates for governor at last election.

None specified. 3/5 voting on amendment.

Majority voting in election or

Massachusetts (b) ........

3% of total votes cast for governor at preceding biennial state election (not less than 25,000 qualified voters).

No more than 1/4 from any one county.

Majority vote on amendment which must be 30% of total ballots cast at election.

Michigan .......................

10% of total voters for all candidates at last gubernatorial election.

None specified.

Majority vote on amendment.

Mississippi ....................

12% of total votes for all candidates for governor in last election.

No more than 20% from any one congressional district.

Majority vote on amendment and not less than 40% of total vote cast at election.

Missouri ........................

8% of legal voters for all candidates for governor at last election.

The 8% must be in each of 2/3 of the congressional districts in the state.

Majority vote on amendment.

Montana ........................

10% of qualified electors, the number of qualified voters to be determined by number of votes cast for governor in preceding election in each county and in the state.

The 10% to include at least 10% of qualified voters in one-half of the counties.

Majority vote on amendment.

Nebraska .......................

10% of total votes for governor at last election.

The 10% must include 5% in each of 2/5 of the counties.

Majority vote on amendment which must be at least 35% of total vote at the election.

Nevada ...........................

10% of voters who voted in entire state in last general election.

10% of total voters who voted in each of 75% of the counties.

Majority vote on amendment in two consecutive general elections.

North Dakota ...............

4% of population of the state.

None specified.

Majority vote on amendment.

Ohio ...............................

10% of total number of electors who voted for governor in last election.

At least 5% of qualified electors in each of 1/2 of counties in the state.

Majority vote on amendment.

Oklahoma .....................

15% of legal voters for state office receiving highest number of voters at last general state election.

None specified.

Majority vote on amendment.

Oregon ...........................

8% of total votes for all candidates for governor at last election at which governor was elected for four-year term.

None specified.

Majority vote on amendment except for supermajority equal to supermajority voting requirement contained in proposed amendment.

South Dakota ................

10% of total votes for governor in last election.

None specified.

Majority vote on amendment.

No. Mariana Islands ....

50% of qualified voters of commonwealth.

In addition, 25% of qualified voters in each senatorial district.

Majority vote on amendment if legislature approved it by majority vote; if not, at least 2/3 vote in each of two senatorial districts in addition to a majority vote.

Source: Survey conducted by Janice May, University of Texas at Austin and The Council of State Governments, January 2005. Key: (a) Only Article IV, the Legislature, may be amended by initiative petition.

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(b) Before being submitted to the electorate for ratification, initiative measures must be approved at two sessions of a successively elected legislature by not less than one-fourth of all members elected, sitting in joint session.


STATE CONSTITUTIONS

Table 1.4 PROCEDURES FOR CALLING CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS Constitutional Provisions State or other jurisdiction

Provision for convention

Legislative vote for submission of convention question (a)

Popular vote to authorize convention

Periodic submission of convention question required (b)

Popular vote required for ratification of convention proposals

Alabama ..................... Alaska ......................... Arizona ....................... Arkansas .................... California ...................

Yes Yes Yes No Yes

Majority No provision (c)(d) Majority No 2/3

ME (c) (e)

No 10 years (c) No

Not specified Not specified (c) MP

MP

No

MP

Colorado .................... Connecticut ................ Delaware .................... Florida ........................ Georgia .......................

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

2/3 2/3 2/3 (g) (d)

MP MP MP MP No

No 20 years (f) No No No

ME MP No provision Not specified MP

Hawaii ........................ Idaho ........................... Illinois ......................... Indiana ....................... Iowa ............................

Yes Yes Yes No Yes

Not specified 2/3 3/4 No Majority

MP MP (i)

9 years No 20 years; 1988

MP (h) Not specified MP

MP

10 years; 1970

MP

Kansas ........................ Kentucky .................... Louisiana ................... Maine .......................... Maryland ...................

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

2/3 Majority (j) (d) (d) Majority

MP MP (k) No No ME

No No No No 20 years; 1970

MP No provision MP No provision MP

Massachusetts ........... Michigan .................... Minnesota .................. Mississippi ................. Missouri .....................

No Yes Yes No Yes

Majority 2/3 No Majority

No MP ME

Not specified 16 years; 1978 No

MP 3/5 voting on proposal

MP

20 years; 1962

Not specified (l)

Montana ..................... Nebraska .................... Nevada ........................ New Hampshire ......... New Jersey .................

Yes (m) Yes Yes Yes No

2/3 3/4 2/3 Majority No

MP MP (o) ME MP

20 years No No 10 years

MP MP No provision 2/3 voting on proposal

New Mexico ............... New York .................... North Carolina .......... North Dakota ............ Ohio ............................

Yes Yes Yes No Yes

2/3 Majority 2/3 No 2/3

MP MP MP

No 20 years; 1957 No

Not specified MP MP

MP

20 years; 1932

MP

Oklahoma .................. Oregon ........................ Pennsylvania ............. Rhode Island ............. South Carolina ..........

Yes Yes No Yes Yes

Majority Majority No Majority (d)

(e) (e)

20 years No

MP No provision

MP ME

10 years No

MP No provision

South Dakota ............. Tennessee ................... Texas ........................... Utah ............................ Vermont .....................

Yes Yes (q) No Yes No

(d) Majority No 2/3 No

(d) MP

No No

(p) MP

ME

No

MP

Virginia ...................... Washington ................ West Virginia ............. Wisconsin ................... Wyoming ....................

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

(d) 2/3 Majority Majority 2/3

No ME MP MP ME

No No No No No

MP Not specified Not specified No provision Not specified

American Samoa ....... No. Mariana Islands .... Puerto Rico ................

Yes Yes Yes

(r) Majority (t) 2/3

No 2/3 MP

No No (u) No

ME (s) MP and at least 2/3 in each of 2 senatorial districts MP

See footnotes at end of table.

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15


STATE CONSTITUTIONS

PROCEDURES FOR CALLING CONSTITUTIONAL CONVENTIONS — Continued Source: Survey conducted by Janice May, University of Texas at Austin and The Council of State Governments, January 2005. Key: MP—Majority voting on the proposal. ME—Majority voting in the election. (a) In all states not otherwise noted, the entries in this column refer to the proportion of members elected to each house required to submit to the electorate the question of calling a constitutional convention. (b) The number listed is the interval between required submissions on the question of calling a constitutional convention; where given, the date is that of the first required submission of the convention question. (c) Unless provided otherwise by law, convention calls are to conform as nearly as possible to the act calling the 1955 convention, which provided for a legislative vote of a majority of members elected to each house and ratification by a majority vote on the proposals. The legislature may call a constitutional convention at any time. (d) In these states, the legislature may call a convention without submitting the question to the people. The legislative vote required is two-thirds of the members elected to each house in Georgia, Louisiana, South Carolina and Virginia; two-thirds concurrent vote of both branches in Maine; three-fourths of all members of each house in South Dakota; and not specified in Alaska, but bills require majority vote of membership in each house. In South Dakota, the question of calling a convention may be initiated by the people in the same manner as an amendment to the constitution (see Table 1.3) and requires a majority vote on the question for approval. (e) The law calling a convention must be approved by the people. (f) The legislature shall submit the question 20 years after the last convention, or 20 years after the last vote on the question of calling a convention, whichever date is last.

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(g) The power to call a convention is reserved to the people by petition. (h) The majority must be 50 percent of the total voted cast at a general election or at a special election, a majority of the votes tallied which must be at least 30 percent of the total number of registered voters. (i) Majority voting in the election, or three-fifths voting on the question. (j) Must be approved during two legislative sessions. (k) Majority must equal one-fourth of qualified voters at last general election. (l) Majority of those voting on the proposal is assumed. (m) The question of calling a constitutional convention may be submitted either by the legislature or by initiative petition to the secretary of state in the same manner as provided for initiated amendments (see Table 1.3). (n) Two-thirds of all members of the legislature. (o) Majority must be 35 percent of total votes cast at the election. (p) Convention proposals are submitted to the electorate at a special election in a manner to be determined by the convention. Ratification by a majority of votes cast. (q) Conventions may not be held more often than once in six years. (r) Five years after effective date of constitutions, governor shall call a constitutional convention to consider changes proposed by a constitutional committee appointed by the governor. Delegates to the convention are to be elected by their county councils. A convention was held in 1972. (s) If proposed amendments are approved by the voters, they must be submitted to the U.S. Secretary of the Interior for approval. (t) The initiative may also be used to place a referendum convention call on the ballot. The petition must be signed by 25 percent of the qualified voters or at least 75 percent in a senatorial district. (u) The legislature was required to submit the referendum no later than seven years after the effective date of the constitution. The convention was held in 1985; 45 amendments were submitted to the voters.


Statutory: Ch. 89, Laws of Utah, 1969; amended by Ch. 107, Laws 1977, which made the commission permanent as of July 1 1977. (Codified as Ch. 54, Title 63, Utah Code Annotated, 1953.)

Method and date of creation and period of operation 16: 1 ex officio, 9 appointed—by the speaker of the House (3), president of the Senate (3), and governor (3)—no more than 2 of each group to be from same party; and 6 additional members appointed by the 9 previously appointed members.

Membership: number and type

Source: Janice May, University of Texas at Austin, January 2005. Note: No constitutional conventions were held from January 1, 2000 through January 1, 2005.

Utah ............................. Utah Constitutional Revision Commission

State

Name of commission

Table 1.5 STATE CONSTITUTIONAL COMMISSIONS (Operative during January 1, 2004 to January 1, 2005)

Appropriations through 1995 totaled $1,023,000. In recent years, annual appropriations have been $55,000. Currently, no funding for independent office or printed annual reports.

Funding Study constitution and recommend desirable changes including proposed drafts.

Purpose of commission

Proposals and action Mandated to report recommendations at least 60 days before legislature convenes. Voter action on commission recommendations through 2000 include: approval of revised articles on legislature, executive, judiciary, elections and rights of suffrage, revenue and taxation, education, and corporations. At 2000 election voters approved an amendment to revise state and local government provisions recommended by the commission and referred by the legislature. Commission unanimously approved revision of impeachment provisions, approved by voters in 2004. Following completion of the study of the Revenue and Taxation article, the voters approved the revision in 2002.

STATE CONSTITUTIONS

The Council of State Governments

17


STATE CONSTITUTIONS

Table 1.6 STATE CONSTITUTIONAL CHANGES BY CONSTITUTIONAL INITIATIVE: 2004 State Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................ Colorado ............................. Florida ................................. Illinois .................................. Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Mississippi .......................... Missouri .............................. Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. North Dakota ..................... Ohio ..................................... Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. South Dakota ...................... Total .....................................

Number of proposals 0 1 7 3 6 0 0 2 0 2 1 2 3 (a) 1 1 0 2 0 31

Source: Janice May, University of Texas at Austin, January 2005. (a) Five initiative proposals were on the ballot in 2004. Three were rejected and have been included in the table because action was final. Two were

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Number of adoptions 0 1 1 1 6 0 0 2 0 1 1 1 0 (a) 1 1 0 1 0 17

Percentage adopted 0.0% 100.0 14.3 33.3 100.0 0.0 0.0 100.0 0.0 50.0 100.0 50.0 0.0 100.0 100.0 0.0 50.0 0.0 54.8

adopted in the first of two sucessive elections required for final adoption. They have been excluded from the table.


Chapter Two

FEDERALISM AND INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS



FEDERAL—STATE RELATIONS

The New Politics of Federalism By Paul E. Peterson The maturation of the welfare state has altered partisan political and policy interests. Republicans are rediscovering the virtues of national power once celebrated by Alexander Hamilton, while Democrats are returning to their Jeffersonian roots. Federalism is usually treated as a philosophical question. For the writers of The Federalist Papers —Alexander Hamilton, James Madison and John Jay—power was best divided between central and lower tiers of government so as to check each from threatening the liberties of individuals. But, in practice, political and economic interests often dictate the positions that are taken. Even the two principal writers of The Federalist Papers, Hamilton and Madison, entered into intense, bitter conflicts over the appropriate meaning of the U. S. Constitution. Hamilton, a New Yorker appreciative of the wealth passing through that rapidly growing port city, wanted a strong central state in order to promote commerce and international trade. Madison, together with his fellow Virginian, Thomas Jefferson, worried more about defending southern agrarian interests against northern speculators. Jefferson is recognized as the spiritual father of the Democratic Party, while Hamilton is at times given comparable status among Republicans. But as political interests changed, so did the positions of the two political parties. Throughout most of the 20th century, it was the New Deal Democrats who celebrated an expansion of the national government in ways Hamilton might have blessed, while conservative Republicans defended states rights that Jefferson had extolled. Today, the parties are returning to their historic roots. In the spring of 2005, the Republican leadership in Congress asked federal courts to assure jurisdiction in the Schiavo case, which raised issues long thought to be the preserve of state courts. Most Democrats opposed the move. Only weeks earlier, the Republican majority in Congress, at the behest of the president, had passed sweeping legislation that shifted class action suits that transcended state boundaries from state to federal courts, a nationalizing move that harkens back to the days of Hamilton and his close ally, Chief Justice John Marshall. Meanwhile, the vast majority of congressional Democrats fiercely defended the prerogatives of state trial courts—notwithstand-

ing the party’s deep-rooted preference of federal over state courts during the Great Society years. Political and economic interests are dictating these changes in party position. Corporate interests closely associated with the Republican Party have long complained about venue-shopping by trial lawyers for courts in which plaintiffs can win large legal settlements. Meanwhile, those same trial lawyers have been one of the key financial pillars of the Democratic Party. The changing partisan views of federalism are not limited to class action suits. Rather, they are rooted in broader societal changes, most importantly, the maturation of the welfare state. When the welfare state was in its expansive phase, Democrats supported national power as the agent of change. Through federal action, Social Security benefits increased, Medicare and Medicaid were adopted, welfare eligibility was expanded, school funding increased, and the federal government passed money to states and localities through a system of categorical and block grants. Once the welfare state became as much of a burden as a blessing, politics began to change. With the election of Ronald Reagan, the politics of the welfare state shifted from growth to retrenchment. The age of retirement was lifted, some social security benefits were cut or eliminated, welfare was reformed, school reform was initiated, and new entitlements became impossible to enact. Reform no longer meant finding new ways to serve the putatively needy but rather testing ideas for making more effective use of tax dollars.

Political Trends These changes were reinforced by political developments, both nationally and locally. It is too simple to say that parties like that level of government they happen to control at any specific moment. But if a party has little opportunity to win a particular bastion of power, they are unlikely to appreciate its virtues. When Republicans found themselves unable to The Council of State Governments

21


FEDERAL—STATE RELATIONS capture undivided control of Congress for any more than four years out of over 60 between 1933 and 1968 and when control of the executive branch was in the hands of Democrats for all but eight of these same years, Republicans had few partisan incentives to support the expansion of federal power. For Democrats, the shoe was altogether on the other foot. But as the South became solidly Republican instead of solidly Democratic, Republicans only had to approach parity elsewhere to capture national power, giving them an advantage in presidential and congressional elections. After decades in the wilderness, the Republicans now enjoy the opportunity to exercise unified power over the central government in the same way the Democrats once did. For the winners, it is hard not to become more interested in federal power; for the losers, it’s easy to rediscover the value of state and local control. Although change at the state and local level has been more gradual, the transformation has been no less dramatic. Traditionally, governments within the United States served conservative interests, such as banks, commercial firms, and manufacturing companies. Each community had to become an attractive place for business—low taxes, minimal regulations—or lose out to competing cities and towns with more supportive policies. Within state legislatures, agrarian interests were given preference over urban ones, in part because many state legislatures overrepresented voters in rural areas. Voting laws restricted access to the ballot of African Americans and other disadvantaged interests, especially in the South. State judges, key to court house rings, were usually beholden to conservative interests. Beginning in the 1960s, a series of political and economic changes began to undermine the conservative bias of the lower tiers of the federalism system. In 1961, the Supreme Court required states to reapportion their state legislatures so that all representatives—in both the upper and lower chambers— would represent roughly equal numbers of residents. The 1966 voting rights legislation gave minority voters access to Southern politics, forcing candidates to find more balanced platforms upon which to campaign. An increasingly liberal Democratic party won sweeping majorities in many states, allowing them to elect and appoint state judges friendly to more liberal causes. Economic forces were undermining business influence at the local level as well. With the globalization of the economy, and the amalgamation of firms into international corporations, corporate headquarters disappeared from middle-sized cities, leaving them without home-owned businesses with a vested 22

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stake in the town’s economic fate. Most significantly, the hometown bank went the way of the spotted owl. Traditionally, it was the president of the leading bank in a community who organized business and commercial interests for political action. The bank’s financial well-being was closely connected to that of the community as a whole. Local banks also were the traditional source of funding for local governments, when loans were needed to finance capital expenses and short-term deficits. As such, banks were natural community leaders. But tax reform in 1986 made it costly for banks to hold municipal loans, and the financial needs of local governments came to be supplied by an international investment community less engaged in the immediate affairs of any given community. Opportunities for local banks to shape local politics were reduced accordingly. As economic elites lost the interest in and capacity to act in local affairs, their influence was replaced by policy professionals spawned by a maturing welfare state. As intergovernmental programs increased in number and size, so did the number of knowledgeable civil servants who had a stake in the programs they operated. These professionals became advocates for causes in which they believed and developed strong ties to groups dependent on the largess they distributed. The balance of power shifted from those with an interest in low taxes to those who wished to perpetuate a high level of welfare provision. As just one sign of this transformation, growth in state and local government expenditure from their own fiscal resources grew almost as fast as federal domestic expenditure. As state and local governments expanded their activities, their workforce grew even when the size of the federal workforce hardly changed. Few realize that the federal civilian workforce numbered less than 3 million workers both in 1951 and, 50 years later, in 2001. Meanwhile, the size of the state workforce expanded from 1 million to 5 million, and local workers skyrocketed fourfold from 4 million to 12 million. The federal government may be paying half the cost of domestic public expenditure, but the state and local governments are doing most of the work.

Public Sector Unionism In the early years of the 20th century, laws against public sector strikes had prevented government workers from exercising the crudest form of political power, the power to withhold their services. When Gov. Calvin Coolidge was asked to respond to the Boston police strike of 1918, he won widespread public backing when he declared “there is no right


FEDERAL—STATE RELATIONS to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, any time.” So popular was his stance, it propelled him from a little known governor to the vice-presidency and beyond. For decades to come, public-sector unionists were at risk if they went on strike. All this began to change in 1961 when President John Kennedy authorized collective bargaining by unions representing federal workers. The practice quickly spread to lower tiers of government. With the right to bargain well in hand by the mid-1970s, public sector unions were able to boost their membership rapidly. The percentage of public-sector employees unionized jumped from about 13 percent in the 1960s to around 40 percent in the mid-1970s, where it has since remained. This expansion occurred at the same time that unions were losing ground in the private sector. Having peaked at about 38 percent of the private labor sector in 1952, it had fallen to 8.5 percent by 2002. As private-sector unions lost membership, the Democratic Party’s most reliable base of support was eroding away beneath its feet. Fortunately for the party, public-sector unions filled the breach, as the membership in these unions became nearly one half of all union workers by 2002. Were it not for public-sector growth, the Democratic Party of the 21st century would bear little resemblance to the party that wrote New Deal and Great Society legislation. By far, the most important of the public-sector unions are two teacher organizations, the National Education Association and the American Federation of Teachers. During the early 1970s, they conducted successful strikes in numerous cities, opening the floodgate to collective bargaining rights across the country. Teachers, spread as they are across the political landscape, located in every political constituency, trained in the arts of writing and speaking, are effective campaign workers and able policy advocates. Ever since the days of Jimmy Carter’s endorsement of a national Department of Education, teacher unions have committed all but a small fraction of these resources to the service of Democratic Party candidates. Significantly, teacher unions have more influence in state and local politics than at the national level. In Washington, teacher unions are challenged by a network of think tanks, cause organizations and policy professionals. In state and local politics, unions seldom face as well-defined an opposition. In Washington, presidents are able to use their rhetorical powers to control the political agenda. Interest groups must work within the constraints the agenda setter creates. At the state and local

level, these same issues become matters of implementation, something that well-organized insiders can control. What is true in education applies to other government employees as well. Public-sector unionism carries greater weight in state and local elections than in national ones, simply because, at the local level, elections have low visibility, with few voters and obfuscated issues. As V. O. Key noted long ago, it is in such contexts that the well organized have the most clout. According to some estimates, public sector employees out-vote the ordinary citizen in local politics by a ratio of anywhere between 2:1 and 6:1.

Partisanship and the Health of a Federal System Nothing in this analysis should leave the reader convinced that Republicans will in short order become aggressive Hamiltonians. Especially within the judiciary, one should expect a sentimental attachment to past Republican federalism clichés. The quaint revival of a faded version of dual sovereignty theory by a bare majority of Supreme Court justices, all of them Republican appointees, is particularly out of step with the times. But one should not give too much weight to the Rehnquist court’s rediscovery of dual sovereignty. Thus far, the Supreme Court decisions in which the concept has been invoked have been of minor significance. Outside the courts, the pressures for a resurgent Hamiltonianism within the Republican Party seem stronger than ever. A security agenda requires a strong national government. Containing the welfare state will require the exercise of national control. State professionals can be expected to resist the new reform agenda to which many Republicans are committed. Public-sector unionism, one of the most powerful sources of resistance to Republican objectives, is more entrenched locally than nationally. Inasmuch as Republicans control all the power centers of the national government, they have little reason to trumpet the rights of states, many of which remain in Democratic hands. Conversely, the Democratic Party must either win the presidency or find solace in the gubernatorial chairs it holds and the state legislators it has elected. Much of the time, it is fighting a rearguard action, one better fought in the hinterland than in the capital city. The street-level bureaucrat is now, more than ever, a major source of its political strength. One should not expect either party to give up nominal commitment to the ideals they have each long expressed. But neither should one expect either party The Council of State Governments

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FEDERAL—STATE RELATIONS to act assiduously to protect them. Party interests have changed. So must their principles. We call attention to this fact not to lament it but to underline the durability—and value—of American federalism. Institutions need to have strengths beyond the interests of particular groups and parties. As Madison pointed out, federalism safeguards liberty by protecting minorities. As Brandeis observed, it provides places for experimentation. Its place in the American political system needs to be more deeply embedded than in the faith system of any one particular party. At the same time, Hamilton’s view of the value of central authority cannot be gainsaid. Without a strong central government, a nation’s economic prosperity is endangered. The United States needs to search for the appropriate balance as much today as it has in

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centuries in past. Shifts in partisan attachments may be one way of finding it.

Editor’s Note This article is drawn from a longer, more documented piece that will appear in Scott L. Greer, ed., Rethinking Territorial Politics: Decentralization, Federalism, Democracy and the Welfare State (Palgrave, forthcoming).

About the Author Paul E. Peterson is the Henry Lee Shattuck Professor of Government at Harvard University.


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State-Federal Relations: Defense, Demography, Debt, and Deconstruction as Destiny By John Kincaid Coercive federalism has shown great continuity since the late 1960s, as characterized by a shift of federal aid from places to persons, policy conditions and earmarks attached to federal aid, preemptions, federal encroachments on state taxation, federalization of state criminal law, defunct intergovernmental institutions, reduced federal-state cooperation within major intergovernmental programs, and federal court litigation. However, unfunded federal mandates and federal court orders mandating major state institutional change have become less prevalent. State policy activism remains vigorous, but the U.S. Supreme Court’s state-friendly federalism jurisprudence has stalled since 2002. State-federal relations reflect both long-term trends initiated in the late 1960s and shorter term trends triggered by the current president and by the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001. The long-term trends are those of coercive or regulatory federalism. These trends continue largely unabated because Congress and the president feel politically and constitutionally uninhibited about displacing state powers.1 The U.S. Supreme Court, which became more state-friendly in the 1990s, has again become less willing to restrain federal power. The shorter term trends are ones of fiscal constraint induced by the economic downturn of 2001-2003 but now being prolonged by the costs of national defense and homeland security, social welfare for senior citizens and long-term federal deficits.2 Although state revenue collections have improved significantly since FY 2003, states face rising costs for major programs such as Medicaid, as well as a need to replenish rainy-day funds. Caught between increasing social welfare costs, reduced federal domestic spending, and voter resistance to tax increases, the watchwords for state officials are budget constraints and fiscal discipline. A federalism bell that did not ring in 2004 was Electoral College reform. George W. Bush’s victory in the popular and Electoral College votes quelled revival of this issue. Another federalism bell that stopped ringing is voting reform. Although implementation of the Help America Vote Act continues, the absence of a major voting scandal in the 2004 presidential election pushed voting reform off center stage.

4-D Destiny The fiscal lifeblood of federalism will be defined for the foreseeable future by compelling costs asso-

ciated with national defense, the demography of aging, long-term deficits, and deconstruction of federal fiscal roles in many domestic programs. Defense and Homeland Security The end of the Cold War in 1989 delivered a peace dividend, which, combined with a booming economy during much of the 1990s, enhanced domestic spending. This dividend expired with President Bush’s declaration of a war on terrorism following the terrorist attacks of 2001. High and rising costs for defense, homeland security, veterans’ benefits and international relations—all of which will consume nearly a quarter of federal spending in FY 2006—will be a long-term feature of the federal budget. Consequently, fewer federal dollars will be available for state and local governments. Furthermore, if all discretionary defense, domestic and international spending is capped, there will be tough defense-versusdomestic competition for money. Overall, reductions in federal domestic discretionary-spending (about a third of which is for grants-in-aid) are likely for the foreseeable future. At the same time, the heavy reliance placed on National Guard units to prosecute the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq has left many states short-handed for responding to domestic emergencies. If recruitment for the National Guard declines as well, many states will lack sufficient military personnel to manage sizable emergencies. Additionally, there are likely to be reductions in federal aid for police and fire services. In an era marked by increased devastation from natural disasters, plus threats of catastrophic terrorism, state and local preparedness is crucial, but that preparedness will require more state and local ownsource funding. The Council of State Governments

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FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS Generally, the Department of Homeland Security has established cooperative relationships with state and local agencies, and complaints about the slow flow of funds to states, and especially to cities, became less prevalent by late 2004, particularly when money for the country’s 50 largest cities began to flow directly to them rather than through the governors’ offices. Instead, concerns are now being expressed about secrecy surrounding how states are spending counterterrorism money. Nevertheless, the flow of federal money for homeland security will not be commensurate with the costs of state and local security responsibilities; hence, homeland security will be a long-running competitor for state and local tax dollars. Demography Social Security, Medicare and other health spending will consume about 46 percent of the FY 2006 federal budget. This can be compared to the categories of agriculture, commerce, community development, education, energy, environment, housing, job training, natural resources, social services, and transportation, which together, will consume only about 10 percent of the FY 2006 federal budget, and to interest payments on the national debt, which will absorb some 8 percent. The new Medicare prescription-drug benefit, which might cost $700 billion over the next 10 years, will add another huge component to federal social welfare spending. The aging of the U.S. population is the states’ single largest and most refractory fiscal challenge, one that will soon become a relentless feature of state budgeting and other policy-making. Federal aid will be constrained because the federal budget will face the same challenge. At the same time, senior citizens, living mostly on fixed and time-limited incomes, are likely to resist tax increases. Debt Increased defense and entitlement spending, along with tax reductions, which produced a $413 billion deficit in FY 2004, will put increasing downward pressure on federal spending on discretionary domestic programs, especially grants for states and local governments. For example, Congress failed to reauthorize surface transportation—the Safe, Accountable, Flexible, and Efficient Transportation Equity Act (SAFETEA)—in 2004 because President Bush insisted on a less costly bill of $256 billion compared to the House’s $275 billion bill and Senate’s $318 billion bill. The projected federal deficit for FY 2005 is $427 billion, with the deficit still running at about $207 26

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billion in 2010. Reductions in federal spending are expected, for example, for K-12 education, Medicaid, Community Development Block Grants, Section 8 housing rental assistance, low-income housing tax credit, low-income home-energy assistance, food stamps, some child-care assistance, Clean Water State Revolving Fund, public health, and bioterrorism, as well as the elimination of such programs as HOPE VI (public housing), the Community Services Block Grant and AMTRAK subsidies. Deconstruction Federal fiscal reductions and withdrawals from a variety of domestic programs have been evident in recent years and will become more so. Yet federal officials are reluctant to relinquish regulations. Consequently, state and local governments will be expected to pick up more of the costs of domestic services while also, in many instances, being expected to comply with federal regulations. In response to this trend, the National Conference of State Legislatures recently revived its Mandate Monitor, estimating that the costs to states of carrying out federally mandated programs will be more than $29 billion in FY 2004 and over $35 billion in FY 2005. Strictly speaking, few if any of these costs stem from mandates. Instead, the costs stem from such things as conditions attached to federal aid, federal failures to release funds, substantive changes to entitlement programs, reduced funding for administration, unfunded increases in administrative rules, increased sanctions, and changes in federal tax policies.

Onward Coercive Federalism Although the federal system remains cooperative in many respects, especially in most intergovernmental-administration arenas, the predominant political, fiscal, statutory, regulatory, and judicial trends have entailed impositions of federal dictates on state and local governments. Grants-in-Aid Although President Bush proposed a modest increase to $435.7 billion in federal aid for states and localities in FY 2006 (about 17 percent of the budget), federal aid has taken on three significant characteristics in this era of coercive federalism. First, aid has shifted substantially from places to persons; that is, almost two-thirds of federal aid is now dedicated for payments to individuals (i.e., social welfare).3 Among the long-term consequences of this shift is that place-oriented aid for such functions as infrastructure, economic development and education has declined


FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS steeply, and the increased aid for social welfare has locked state budgets into programs ripe for escalating federal regulation and matching state costs. Medicaid, which alone accounts for almost 45 percent of all federal aid and serves nearly 52 million people, is the leading example of this shift. Combined federal and state spending on Medicaid has increased 63 percent during the last five years. The federal government provides 57 percent of the nearly $300 billion of total Medicaid funding. President Bush has proposed $45 billion in Medicaid reductions over 10 years, a proposal strongly resisted by the governors. In turn, Bush wants to give states more flexibility and to reduce or eliminate the current process by which states must apply for waivers from federal rules. However, even with state cutbacks in services, Medicaid continues to display a voracious appetite for state dollars. A second characteristic has been increased use of conditions of aid to achieve federal objectives that lie beyond Congress’s constitutionally enumerated powers and to extract higher levels of spending on federal objectives from state and local governments. Conditions of aid, which are now often mistakenly called “mandates,” are a powerful tool for federal policy-makers.4 The 670-page No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) of 2002 is the states’ current cause célebre because of the costly testing and performance requirements established by the NCLB. Even the governor and legislature of Utah, the state that voted the most strongly for Bush in 2004, have demanded more freedom from the NCLB’s “mandates.”5 Recent research seems to confirm state officials’ complaints that the NCLB’s compliance costs substantially exceed the law’s grant-in-aid funding.6 Although the U.S. Department of Education has recently taken a more flexible approach to enforcing the NCLB, President Bush wants to extend the NCLB’s requirements beyond the eighth grade to all public high schools. After a two-year battle, Congress reauthorized the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA) and even authorized the federal government to pay by 2011 nearly 40 percent of the states’ annual excess costs of educating the nation’s 6.5 million children with disabilities. This 40 percent had been promised when IDEA was enacted in 1975, but it never exceeded 19 percent. However, IDEA funding remains discretionary, and the reauthorized IDEA imposes new regulations on the states while also providing relief from some previous rules. Several other education programs, including Head Start, the Higher Education Act and the Workforce

Investment Act, were not reauthorized by the 108th Congress. For the second time, Congress also failed to reauthorize the 1996 welfare reform law, which expired in 2002. Congress did revive the E-Rate program that provides grants to schools and libraries to connect to the Internet. The law also authorizes $250 million a year in grants to states over five years to improve the ability of 911 systems to track the location of cell phone callers. Congress passed the Innocence Protection Act, which, among other things, provides grants to states to help expedite the processing of biological crimescene evidence, preserve DNA evidence, defray the costs of post-conviction DNA testing, and represent defendants as well as victims in state capital cases. Congress also authorized the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to give preference for its asthma-prevention grants to states that allow students with asthma or other life-endangering allergies to medicate themselves at school. The third notable change affecting the delivery of aid to places has been a significant increase in congressional earmarking (i.e., pork-barreling). The number of earmarks increased from under 2,000 in 1998 to 9,362 by 2003. For example, the 2004 SAFETEA bill contained some 2,881 earmarks compared to 538 in the 1991 act and 1,800 in the 1998 law.7 The Fund for the Improvement of Postsecondary Education even cancelled its FY 2005 competition for grants because 89 percent of the appropriation was already consumed by 419 earmarked grants (compared to two earmarks accounting for 18 percent of the appropriation in FY 1998). Earmarking advocates argue that members of Congress, as elected officials, are better qualified than “bureaucrats” to make funding allocations. Mandates Mandates have been another characteristic of coercive federalism; however, mandating plateaued with enactment of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (UMRA) of 1995. UMRA cut new mandate enactments sharply, but did not eliminate standing mandates. Currently, one sizable mandate looms on the horizon—a bill to standardize drivers’ licenses, the Real ID Act, which could cost states hundreds of millions. States could opt out, but then their licenses would not be accepted for any federal-government purpose, including boarding an airplane, purchasing a firearm, and entering a federal building. The bill calls for a year and a half of implementation consultation among state and federal officials and others. The Council of State Governments

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FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS Preemptions The historically unprecedented level of federal preemption of state powers characteristic of coercive federalism was well symbolized by enactment of the Class Action Fairness Act of 2005, which prohibits state courts from hearing most class-action suits that involve more than 100 plaintiffs and $5 million in potential damages. Such suits must be heard by federal courts. This is a major change in tort law and, thus, a major derogation of an historic state power. The act, however, is only the first of what President Bush and many members of Congress foresee as much broader preempting of state tort powers. In March 2004, the U.S. Office of the Comptroller of the Currency issued a final rule preempting a range of state laws previously applicable to national banks. Federal preemption is not a new idea,” said Comptroller John D. Hawke, “Its roots lie in the Supremacy Clause of the Constitution, and the courts have repeatedly held that the states cannot restrict the federally authorized activities of national banks.”8 Insurance regulation, long a state responsibility, will likely come under increased congressional scrutiny, especially with insurance companies pressing for federal intervention. As U.S. Sen. Richard C. Shelby’s office put it, “If the state regulators are not up to the task of regulating the insurance industry, we may have to look at alternatives.”9 Preemption is frequently upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court. In fact, the “Federalism Five” justices who ordinarily vote for the states in federalism cases often vote against the states in preemption cases. In a pair of 2004 cases, for example, the Court unanimously held that patients’ rights laws in 10 states that allowed patients to sue their health plans over decisions to withhold coverage were preempted by the 1974 Employee Retirement Income Security Act .10 Taxation Another characteristic of coercive federalism has been federal constraints on state taxation and borrowing, beginning especially with the enactment of limits on tax-exempt private-activity bonds in 1984. Federal judicial and statutory prohibitions of state taxation of Internet services and sales are among the most prominent, current constraints. In November 2004, Congress extended its Internet tax ban (i.e., the Internet Tax Non-Discrimination Act) to November 2007. Congress did revive the federal incometax deduction for state and local sales taxes (which had been eliminated in 1986) for 2004 and 2005, pri28

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marily to benefit taxpayers who live in states lacking an income tax (e.g., Florida, South Dakota, Texas and Washington). However, itemizing taxpayers can only deduct their state and local income taxes or sales taxes, not both. Talk in Congress and the White House about possibly repealing the estate tax permanently, limiting or eliminating the deductibility of all state and local taxes, providing new federal-tax deductions, and offering new tax incentives for saving and charitable giving could lead, directly and indirectly, to reductions in state and local revenues. Even more ominous for state-local revenue systems is the quietly growing discussion of enacting a federal sales tax or value added tax. A potential time bomb for state and local economicdevelopment efforts is a 2004 ruling by a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit that a 1998 tax break awarded to DaimlerChrysler AG by Toledo and Ohio violated the U.S. Constitution’s commerce clause. Business organizations, such as the Council on State Taxation, have joined with state and local officials in a vigorous effort to overturn this ruling and preserve states’ rights. Federalization of State Criminal Law Another feature of coercive federalism has been the federalization of state criminal law, to the point where there are now some 3,500 federal criminal offenses, nearly half of which have been enacted since the mid1960s. The number of federal prisoners has increased from about 20,000 in 1981 to nearly 175,000 today, and the number of federal prosecutors jumped from 1,500 in 1981 to more than 7,000 now. Generally, federal criminal laws are tougher than comparable state laws and make prosecutions and convictions easier than under state laws. Demise of Intergovernmental Institutions Coercive federalism has been marked, as well, by the demise of executive and congressional intergovernmental institutions established during the era of cooperative federalism to enhance cooperation. Most notable was the death of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations in 1996 after 37 years of operation. Decline of Political Cooperation There also has been a decline in federal-state cooperation in major grant programs such as Medicaid and surface transportation, with Congress earmarking and altering programs more in response to national and regional interest groups than to elected state


FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS and local officials, who themselves are viewed as little more than interest groups. Federal Court Litigation Coercive federalism also has been marked by unprecedented numbers of federal court orders and a quantum leap in the number of times state and local governments are sued in federal courts. Although federal court orders dictating major and costly changes in such institutions as schools, prisons and mental health facilities have declined since the early 1990s, state and local governments are subject to high levels of litigation in federal courts, with various interests often trying to block major state policy initiatives through litigation. The U.S. Supreme Court resurrected the 11th Amendment in the 1990s to restrain some types of such litigation, but the reach of the Court’s decisions has been quite limited.

U.S. Supreme Court’s Stalled Federalism Revolution Indeed, since 2002, the Supreme Court has exhibited a reluctance to continue its state-friendly federalism rulings initiated in 1991. In fact, in the major federalism case of 2003-2004, the Court, voting 5-4, held that states have no 11th Amendment immunity under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act against citizen lawsuits over gaining physical access to courts.11 The justices also upheld unanimously a 1984 federal law that makes it a federal crime to bribe a state or local official whose agency receives more than $10,000 in federal grants or contracts.12 The Court then generated turmoil in about a dozen state criminal-justice systems, plus the federal justice system, by overturning a Washington law that allowed judges to independently increase a convicted defendant’s sentence beyond the usual length for the crime.13 The Court even sustained one of the key structural supports for coercive federalism, namely, partisan gerrymandering, which creates so many safe U.S. House seats and fosters ideological polarization in Congress. By a 5-4 vote, the Court rejected a Democrat challenge to post-2000 census partisan gerrymandering in Pennsylvania.14

Federalism and the Culture Wars For the general public, federalism became salient in 2004 because of debates associated with the socalled culture wars of recent decades. Rulings by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in 2003 and 2004 upholding gay marriage triggered intense national controversy. President Bush endorsed a fed-

eral constitutional amendment to ban gay marriage nationwide; Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry wanted to leave gay marriage to the states. Bush also asked the federal courts to strike down Oregon’s Death With Dignity Act, which permits physician-assisted suicide. Meanwhile, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit rejected again an administration effort to neuter California’s medicinal marijuana law. As a result of such Bush initiatives, many liberals, historically hostile to states’ rights, are now warming to states’ rights.15 However, there also is growing pressure to allow more state regulation of abortion and for the Supreme Court to set aside its 1973 abortion ruling so as to restore state authority over abortion. Here, the tables are turned, with conservatives supporting states’ rights and liberals opposing states’ rights.

State Activism Another, seemingly contradictory characteristic of coercive federalism has been state policy activism, especially since the early 1980s. However, this activism has been both a response to coercive federalism as states have bucked federal policies and filled federal policy voids and a stimulant of coercive federalism as interest groups have sought federal intervention to tranquilize hyperactive states. State attorneys general, treasurers, pension-fund heads and others have pursued aggressive litigation and regulation in many policy areas. For example, eight states have joined in a federal lawsuit against utilities to reduce carbon dioxide emissions. The California Air Resources Board (CARB) shocked the automobile industry in 2004 by adopting regulations to reduce automobile and light-truck emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases by 30 percent within 11 years. A leading justification for such state activism was expressed by CARB’s chairman: “Absent federal leadership, it’s important for California to demonstrate that there is a way to address global warming.”16 Nine automakers filed suit to overturn the regulation, but Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vowed “to fight the expected court challenges.”17 Highly publicized in 2004 were efforts by nearly half the states to explore mechanisms, such as state Web sites listing prescreened foreign pharmacies, to help citizens import cheaper pharmaceuticals from Canada in defiance of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. Several states have approved and supported stem-cell research in defiance of President Bush’s policy. Consequently, state activism has brought some intergovernmental policy competition into the federal system. The Council of State Governments

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Conclusion Although state activism will generate a kind of competitive state-federal federalism, coercive federalism will be the system’s dominant motif and will be exacerbated by the fiscal pressures generated by defense, demography, debt, and deconstruction. Notes 1 See, John Kincaid, “Trend in Federalism: Continuity, Change and Polarization,” The Book of the States 2004, (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2004), 21-7; John Kincaid, “State-Federal Relations: Continuing Regulatory Federalism,” The Book of the States 2002, (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2002) 25–32; John Kincaid, “From Cooperation to Coercion in American Federalism: Housing, Fragmentation, and Preemption, 1780-1992,” Journal of Law and Politics 9 (Winter 1993): 333-433. 2 See, John Kincaid, “Trends in Federalism: Is Fiscal Federalism Fizzling?” The Book of the States 2003, (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2003), 26-31. 3 For explication, see John Kincaid, “The State of U.S. Federalism, 2000-2001,” Publius: The Journal of Federalism 31 (Summer 2001): 1-69. 4 See, for example, Karl Kronebusch, “Matching Rates and Mandates: Federalism and Children’s Medicaid Enrollment,” Policy Studies Journal 32:3 (2004): 317-37. 5 Sam Dillon, “Strongly G.O.P. Utah House Challenges Bush’s Signature Education Law,” New York Times, February 16, 2005, A14; Associated Press, “States rebelling over new rules on education,” Express-Times (Easton), February 18, 2004, A-8. 6 Jennifer Imazeki and Andrew Reschovsky, “Is No Child Left Behind an Un (or Under) funded Federal Mandate?

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Evidence from Texas,” National Tax Journal 57 (September 2004): 571-79. 7 Brian Friel, “Defending Pork,” National Journal 36 (May 8, 2004): 1405. 8 Statement of the Comptroller of the Currency at http:/ /www.occ.treas.gov/2004-3aComprollersstatement.pdf, accessed March 30, 2004. 9 Quoted in Joseph B. Treaster, “States vs. U.S.: Who Will Police Insurance Firms?” New York Times, December 31, 2004, C3. 10 Aetna Health Care Inc. v. Davila and Cigna HealthCare of Texas Inc. v. Calad, 124 S. Ct. 2488 (2004). 11 Tennessee v. Lane, 124 S. Ct. 1978 (2004). 12 Sabri v. United States, 124 S. Ct. 1941 (2004). 13 Blakely v. Washington, 124 S. Ct. 2531 (2004). 14 Vieth v. Jubelirer, 541 U.S. 267 (2004). 15 See, for example, Jim Holt, “A States’ Rights Left?” New York Times Magazine, November 21, 2004, 27-28; Jonah Goldberg, “Federalism vs. states’ rights,” ExpressTimes (Easton), December 2, 2004, A-10. 16 Quoted in Stuart F. Brown, “California rocks the auto industry,” Fortune 150 (November 1, 2004): 154. 17 Quoted in Dan Hakim, “Automakers Sue to Block Emissions Law In California,” New York Times, December 8, 2004, C1.

About the Author John Kincaid is the Robert B. and Helen S. Meyner Professor of Government and Public Service and director of the Meyner Center for the Study of State and Local Government at Lafayette College in Easton, Penn. He is also editor of Publius: The Journal of Federalism and former executive director of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations.


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Reflections on Intergovernmental Re-Balancing: Back to the Future By Carl W. Stenberg The intergovernmental balance has shifted to the national government. Federal deficits, debt service, defense spending, and entitlement pressures will reduce discretionary spending, and could rekindle interest in decentralization and devolution. State leaders need to network horizontally and vertically to rebalance the federal system. In the 1984–1985 edition of The Book of the States I contributed an article that attempted to sort out the reality from the rhetoric of the federalism debate taking place in Washington, DC, state capitols, county court houses and city halls. The debate focused on reallocation of functional and fiscal responsibilities, spurred by President Ronald Reagan’s “Big Swap” proposal for the national government to take over the states’ share of Medicaid in exchange for state assumption of full funding responsibility for welfare and food stamps. Other concerns were federal budget build-ups in defense and entitlements, elimination of grant-in-aid programs, and growing regulatory burdens and unfunded mandates. These developments contributed to tension and uncertainty at all governmental levels. As then executive director of The Council of State Governments (CSG), I observed that “rebalancing” of intergovernmental relations had shifted the pendulum toward more state- and local-oriented federalism. I called upon states to capitalize on their increased institutional capacity and commit to pursue their historic roles as “laboratories of democracy,” to formulate innovative approaches to domestic challenges and forge productive partnerships with the national government and their local governments. Two decades later, the resiliency and dynamism of the federal system are both apparent. States and localities are still key program “rowers” in delivering important services and implementing national programs and regulations.1 The national government is still the big borrower and big spender in the federal system, while “big government,” in terms of personnel payrolls and range of functional responsibilities, resides at the state and local levels. State and local representatives still complain about unfunded mandates, under-funded federal programs, and unwarranted preemptions. Re-balancing has continued and produced a shift toward national-oriented federalism. The president,

Congress and federal agencies have assumed significant policy “steering” roles, with the concurrence of the Supreme Court. Globalization, the New Economy, and the Information Age have raised important questions about matters on which the United States should speak with one or 50 voices. This article comments on factors contributing to this latest intergovernmental power balance shift, and suggests steps state leaders could take to move the pendulum in a more sub-national direction.

Looking Upward The changing relationship between the states and the national government can be captured in seven “d” words: deficit, debt, defense, demographics, discretion, deregulation and decentralization. Deficits and Debt. Fiscal factors have been prominent determinants of intergovernmental balance. Although states enjoyed budget surpluses during most of the 1990s and the national government achieved a budget surplus during the Clinton administration, a current concern is the widening federal budget deficit, estimated at $413 billion by the Congressional Budget Office in FY 2004. States are recovering from severe budget crises accompanying the recent recession, and most must comply with constitutional balanced budget requirements. Tax cuts, coupled with politician’s promises to not raise taxes, reduce deficit reduction options of national and state policymakers. Accompanying mounting federal budget deficits is national debt growth, estimated by the Government Accountability Office (GAO) at $6.8 trillion, or about $24,000 gross debt per person. Interest payments for debt service will limit future spending options for the president and Congress.2 Defense. The war against terror is the latest contributor to the defense build-up that began during the Reagan administration. Although the defense share of total 2004 federal spending is about 20 percent, The Council of State Governments

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FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS compared with 27 percent in 1984, heightened security concerns at home and abroad will call for greater defense investments. Demographics. Americans are benefiting from health care advances and living longer, more productive lives. They will draw down Social Security and other retirement accounts and depend more on Medicaid and Medicare to help cover rapidly rising health care expenses. Medicaid’s growth over the past two decades produced a shift in major beneficiaries of federal grants-in-aid, from places to people, and there are no indications of slowdown; Medicaid now accounts for approximately 45 percent of total federal aid, and its share of state budgets has about doubled over the past 10 years.3 Discretion. The above factors reveal a sizable and expanding portion of the federal budget as nondiscretionary. Debt service, entitlement payments for income support and health care, and defense spending will put much of the federal budget on “autopilot.” In times of budget pressure, the discretionary portion—mainly grants-in-aid, amounting to $412 billion in 2003—will be looked to as a revenue source for on-going commitments and new national priorities. 4 Deregulation. Deregulation has been a powerful force in the New Economy and Information Age, affecting markets, production processes, communications and skill requirements. Like businesses, governments have been compelled to become more nimble, entrepreneurial, performance-based, and customer-oriented. While deregulation has been a key component of private sector economic activity, the intergovernmental record has been mixed. Three examples follow. 1. The Unfunded Mandate Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) was initially a major victory for state and local government representatives. UMRA sought to discourage Congress from imposing mandates and to ensure that compliance costs of bills containing federal mandates would be brought to the attention of congressional committees and, if enacted, would be accompanied by compensatory funds. But these hopes have not been realized. Coverage exemptions—such as Social Security, voting rights, grant conditions, national emergencies, program reauthorizations, and preemptions—“grandfathering” of all pre-1995 mandates, focus on fiscal impacts of individual bills instead of on cumulative federalism assessments, and underestimation of state and local compliance costs by federal agencies have limited UMRA’s impact.5 2. Eligible states have received waivers of admin32

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istrative requirements in Medicaid, environmental and other programs. Yet, over the past 20 years traditional instruments of regulatory federalism—crosscutting requirements accompanying federal aid, crossover sanctions, full and partial preemptions, and direct orders - have become more popular with Congresses and presidents. 3. Two important Federalism Executive Orders have been issued, E.O. 12612 in 1987 by President Reagan and E.O. 13132 in 1999 by President Clinton. Together they contained “Fundamental Federalism Principles” and “Federalism Policy Criteria,” which sought to constrain preemptions and grant conditions, broaden intergovernmental consultation on regulation, streamline waiver processes, and promote states’ integrity and discretion. However, GAO found that federal agencies rarely identified federalism impacts in their administrative rulemaking.6 Decentralization. Observers called the 1990s the “devolution revolution” decade, featuring proposals to encourage states to play leadership roles as policy innovation “laboratories” and to shift significant federal program responsibilities to the states via administrative decentralization, rather than devolution of federal powers. K–12 education reform, environmental initiatives such as smart growth and anti-sprawl programs, and economic development incentives were examples of the former. 7 The Clinton administration’s welfare reform initiative was the prime decentralization example. The Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF) block grant, which replaced the Aid to Families with Dependent Children program established during the New Deal, gave states considerable latitude in setting priorities, determining eligibility, integrating state programs, re-engineering delivery systems, creating workfare programs, and engaging private and non-profit organizations in case management and service delivery. At the same time, the national government retained major roles in funding, although capped at the 1996 level, and standard-setting, such as limiting aid to five years, requiring welfare recipients to find work within two years, and curbing benefits for legal and illegal immigrants. The number of block grants has reached record levels (from 18 to 25, depending on definitions, compared with 12 in 1983), and three (TANF, community development, and social services) are among the 20 largest grant programs. Yet, Congress continues to do business with states and localities chiefly through narrowly focused categorical instruments and to limit broad-based assistance (to less than 20 percent of total aid).8 The Bush administration has


FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS proposed giving states greater authority and discretion by converting Medicaid, low-income housing vouchers, Head Start, job-training and child welfare programs into block grants. From the states’ standpoint, the troubling trade-off with block grants is when, compared with the categorical programs they replace, more flexibility is exchanged for fewer federal dollars. In summary, the seven “d’s” have been powerful forces in determining state-federal power balances. They suggest re-appearance of a three-pronged scenario from the 1980s on the intergovernmental scene—sorting out and shifting of functions, decentralization of responsibilities through block grants, and disinvestment in categorical programs—leaving it to states and localities to shoulder increased responsibilities, pass along cuts, or eliminate programs. The functional turn-back or devolution of powers record has been sparse, administrative decentralization has been limited to a few block grants, and categorical grants have proven resilient (as underscored by the rebounding of categorical programs from the historic 25 percent reduction achieved by the Reagan administration and Congress, from 539 in 1980 to 404 in 1984, to over 660 programs 20 years later). But the budget pressures outlined above could well re-open the devolution debate.

Looking Outward If re-balancing is to occur, state leaders will need to work together more strategically and build effective horizontal and vertical networks. This need is underscored by the advent of the New Economy, featuring globalization of commerce, communications and technology. Globalization has posed a serious question: on what matters should the United States speak with 50 voices, or with one voice? Business representatives, environmental and consumer groups, organized labor, and others engaged in interstate and international commerce often prefer a single, stable policy or standard—not a patchwork of 50—which clashes with the states’ role as “laboratories.” Congress has enacted 518 federal statutory preemptions since 1790, with 68 passed between 1995 and 2004.9 Some of these have been partial, featuring a national minimum standard that states may exceed, while others fully preempt a field or impose maximum federal standards. In recent years states have lost authority to regulate nationally traded securities, pesticides and local telecommunications. Federal preemptions are under consideration in a wide range of areas, such as electronics recycling, greenhouse gas

emissions, prescription drugs, lawn mower and leaf blower emissions, appliance energy consumption and biotechnology. There is no clear line between the states’ police powers in enforcement and consumer protection, for example, and the demands of interstate commerce and global markets. But the common approach by the Congress and White House has been preemption. In light of these national and international trends, what can state leaders do? One response has been efforts by state attorneys general to confront national authorities when they were acting too slowly or contrary to state interests. The state-led tobacco settlement, in which major tobacco companies agreed to make $250 billion in compensatory payments for costs of treating tobacco-related illnesses under state Medicaid programs, was a major breakthrough. As implementers of environmental policy, states have challenged administration efforts to weaken air quality regulations, criticized the Environmental Protection Agency’s (EPA) reluctance to regulate interstate emissions from coal-fired power plants, and sued the EPA for failure to regulate carbon dioxide emissions. This activism indicates states can be on the frontlines when Congress and the administration are at stalemate on important national policy issues or unwilling to ensure appropriate levels of regulation to protect the public and enhance the quality of life. A second trend is steady increase in formal and informal interstate cooperation, marked by growth in the number of compacts to more than 200. The Streamlined State Sales and Use Tax Agreement, signed by over 40 states, is an example of what can be done even in a complex, confusing and controversial area as tax policy. Although the effort was unsuccessful in preventing approval of the Internet Tax Nondiscrimination Act, which imposed a moratorium prohibiting states and local governments from levying taxes on Internet access, interstate cooperation could be an alternative to federal preemption in other areas. CSG and other organizations of state officials play vital roles in helping states network together regionally and nationally to find solutions to domestic problems. The establishment of CSG’s National Center for Interstate Compacts to promote use of these instruments to address national and state priorities underscores their potential in facilitating state collaboration. 10 Continued development of model state legislation by CSG to share “best practices” and issuance of uniform laws by the National Conference of Commissioners of Uniform State Laws also could boost interstate relations, or “horizontal federalism,” as a viable strategy for reducing The Council of State Governments

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FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS pressures for national preemption and mandates.11

Looking Downward States and localities are key “rowers” in the intergovernmental system. While national initiatives such as No Child Left Behind, Homeland Security, Elections Administration, and Community-Oriented Policing receive media attention, their success is dependent on effective implementation by sub-national units. Similarly, a productive partnership between state and local governments is essential for delivery of major state-assisted programs such as elementary and secondary education. To the extent state and local officials can successfully develop solutions to public problems, Congress may be less willing to play the roles of city council, county commission, or state legislature. Generalizations about the “state of state-local relations” are difficult to make across 50 different systems and are often subject to the “Miles Law” factor—where you stand depends on where you sit. Just as in state-federal relations, friction points exist in state-local relations, such as financial aid cutbacks, unfunded mandates, and preemptions of authority. State leaders could use at least six indicators to assess current conditions and remedial actions. These are extent to which states: (1) give localities greater discretionary authority over their forms of government, personnel policy, services and especially revenues; (2) provide financial aid to replace lost federal dollars and state recession budget cuts, and resist further cutbacks in local assistance payments; (3) work with localities to make their tax systems more progressive and fair; (4) assume greater financial and administrative responsibility for functions that are costly, ignore local boundaries, have negative spillovers, require inter-jurisdictional equity, or of regional or statewide impact—such as social welfare, courts, mental health, education, corrections and transportation; (5) exercise restraint in imposing state mandates on local governments, and demonstrate willingness to compensate for compliance costs or allow local implementation flexibility; and (6) provide inter-local and regional collaboration incentives. These steps could go a long way toward building a more positive and productive state-local relationship. But they are difficult to sell. It is tempting for state officials to merely pass along aid cuts, unfunded mandates, and intrusive administrative conditions; there is not much local units as state “subdivisions” can do constitutionally or politically to stop such actions. But from the standpoint of effective imple34

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mentation at the local level—which public opinion polls have found to be the most trustworthy and capable of delivering the most for their money—states should consider pursuing a “second-order devolution” approach outlined above.

Looking Ahead Forecasting the future is a difficult and daunting task, particularly in a complex, dynamic federal system. Power balances between the states and the nation and states and their localities are affected by a variety of forces, such as international commerce, security, information technology, finances and demographics. For state leaders, the bad news during the past 20 years is that these and other factors have produced centralizing pressures that strengthened the role of the national government and supported “one size fits all” domestic and international approaches. But the good news is that while the deficit, debt, defense and demographic demands on the federal budget will put pressure on discretionary spending, which could lead to program cutbacks, more decentralization and even devolution initiatives could be on the horizon. And the states will remain on the frontlines as chief implementers of national programs and regulatory policy and innovation “laboratories.” Capitalizing on these trends and moving the pendulum in a more sub-national direction will require states to work together and with their local governments in more sustained and strategic ways than has been customary. Forging effective networks among state leaders on interstate issues and between state and local officials on state and sub-state issues that leads to effective collective action on common problems will be key to demonstrating their capacity and commitment to partnership federalism and to reducing centralizing pressures.

Notes 1 David Osborne and Ted Gaebler, Reinventing Government, (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co., 1992). 2 John Kincaid, “Trends in Federalism: Continuity, Change and Polarization,” The Book of the States 2004 (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2004), 22–23. 3 The Book of the States 2004 (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2004), 41. 4 National Academy of Public Administration, “Fiscal Future Positioning Committee Report,” November 19, 2004.


FEDERAL-STATE RELATIONS 5 U.S. General Accounting Office, “Unfunded Mandates: Analysis of Reform Act Coverage,” (Washington, DC: U.S. General Accounting Office, May 2004). 6 Timothy Conlan, From New Federalism to Devolution: Twenty-Five Years of Intergovernmental Reform (Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution 1998); L. Nye Stevens, “Implementation of Executive Order 12612 in the Rulemaking Process, Testimony before the Committee on Governmental Affairs, U.S. Senate, May 5, 1999; “Comments on S. 1214—The Federalism Accountability Act of 1999,” July 14, 1999. 7 Parris N. Glendening, “The Devolution Conflict,” State Government News (February 2003), 12–13; Richard P. Nathan, “The Devolution Revolution: An Overview,” Rockefeller Institute Bulletin (Albany: The Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, 1996). 8 David B. Walker, The Rebirth of Federalism: Slouching toward Washington (New York: Chatham House Publishers, 2000), 6–7; David R. Beam and Timothy J. Conlan, “Grants,” in Lester M. Salamon, The Tools of Government (New York: Oxford University Press, 2002), 347–353. 9 Joseph F. Zimmerman, “The United States Federal Sys-

tem: A Kaleidoscopic View,” Paper presented at a research seminar, Rothermere American Institute, Oxford University, November 23, 2004; “Congressional Preemption: Regulatory Federalism,” Paper presented at the annual conference of the American Political Science Association, September 4, 2004. 10 John J. Mountjoy, “National Center for Interstate Compacts: A New Initiative,” Spectrum (Fall 2004), 8–11. 11 Joseph F. Zimmerman, Interstate Relations: The Neglected Dimension of Federalism (Westport, CN: Praeger, 1996; “Trends in Interstate Relations,” Spectrum (Fall 2004), 5–7, 11.

About the Author Carl W. Stenberg is a professor of public administration and government at the School of Government, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. He served previously as assistant director of the U.S. Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations and executive director of The Council of State Governments.

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INTERSTATE RELATIONS

Interstate Relations Trends By Joseph F. Zimmerman This article notes the importance of the United States Constitution’s full faith and credit clause relative to sister state recognition of same sex marriages in Massachusetts, interstate commerce clause in removing barriers to trade, and interstate compact clause in promoting interstate cooperation, and summarizes developments involving interstate administrative cooperation and controversies. Five most important interstate clauses—full faith and credit, interstate commerce, interstate compacts, privileges and immunities, and rendition—were incorporated in the U.S. Constitution by its drafters to make perfect the economic and political union.

Full Faith and Credit Section 1 of Article IV contains a mandate: “Full Faith and Credit shall be given in each State to the public acts, records, and judicial proceedings of every other State” and grants Congress authority to “prescribe the manner in which such acts, records, and proceedings shall be proved, and the effect thereof.” This authority was exercised in 1790, 1804, 1980, 1994, 1996 and 1999. The 1996 clarification was prompted by the Hawaiian Supreme Court’s 1993 decision in Baehr v. Miike (852 P.2d 44 at 5772) opining the statutory denial of the issuance of a marriage license to same sex couples violated equal protection provision and equal rights amendment to the state constitution and remanding the case for a trial. Trial judge Kevin S.C. Chang on December 3, 1996, ruled same sex couples had the constitutional right to marry. The decision’s implementation was delayed until the state legislature had an opportunity to act. It proposed and voters ratified on November 3, 1998, a constitutional amendment (Art. I, §23) reversing the Supreme Court’s decision by granting the legislature “the power to reserve marriage to opposite sex couples.” The Hawaiian Supreme Court’s decision prompted a response from Congress in the form of the Defense of Marriage Act of 1996 (110 Stat. 2419, 1 U.S.C. §1) defining a marriage as “a legal union between one man and one woman as husband and a wife” and the term “spouse” as “a person of the opposite sex who is husband or a wife” and authorizing states to deny “full faith and credit to a marriage certificate of two persons of the same sex.” On August 17, 2004, U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Paul B. Snyder in Tacoma, Washington, issued the first decision on the constitutionality of the act and ruled it does not vio36

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late the equal protection of the laws clause of the U.S. Constitution. Currently, 39 states have enacted a state defense of marriage act, and Maryland, New Hampshire, Wisconsin and Wyoming have statutes or court decisions banning same sex marriages. Missouri voters on August 3, 2004, and Louisiana voters on September 18, 2004, ratified a defense of marriage constitutional amendment defining a marriage as between a man and a woman, and voters in 11 states approved a similar proposition on November 2, 2004. Four of the latter amendments—in Montana, Mississippi, Missouri and Oregon—also preclude civil unions. The controversy over same sex marriages was reignited on November 18, 2003, by the 4 to 3 decision of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in Goodridge v. Department of Health (440 Mass. 309, 798 N.E.2d 941) holding unconstitutional a statute denying “the protections, benefits, and obligations conferred by civil marriage to two individuals of the same sex who wish to marry.” The decision immediately raised an important legal question: Are same sex nonresidents eligible to marry in the Commonwealth? The answer is no for some nonresidents, since a 1913 Massachusetts statute disqualifies individuals from marrying if they are ineligible to marry in their home state.1 The constitutionality of this law was upheld on August 18, 2004, by state Superior Court Judge Carol S. Ball. The Massachusetts Senate requested an advisory opinion from the court whether a civil union statute would comply with the court’s decision. The court’s 4 to 3 majority on February 4, 2004, answered the question in the negative (440 Mass. 1201, 802 N.E.2d 565), but indicated the General Court (state legislature) had the option of not calling a same sex civil union a marriage if the term was drop for heterosexual marriages. Justice Martha B. Sosman, one of three dissenters, wrote “it is beyond the ability of the Legislature—and even beyond the ability of this court, no matter how activist it becomes in support of this cause—to confer a package of benefits and


INTERSTATE RELATIONS obligations on same-sex ‘married’ couples that would be truly identical to the entire package of benefits and obligations that being ‘married’ confers on opposite-sex couples” (440 Mass 1201 at 1213, 802 N.E.2d 565 at 574). The General Court in 2004 proposed a constitutional amendment reversing the Supreme Judicial Court’s decision. This proposal will not appear on the referendum ballot unless the General Court approves the proposal for a second time in 2005. Should the proposition appear on the 2006 ballot and voters approve it, same sex couples who married between May 17, 2004, and November 7, 2006, will be in a legal limbo as they were legally married, but their marriage will be illegal after adoption of the constitutional amendment. In related developments, the California Supreme Court on August 12, 2004, unanimously invalidated more than 4,000 same sex marriages authorized by San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom, and California Attorney General William Lockyer on October 8, 2004, issued an opinion declaring a law barring same sex marriage does not violate the state constitution. New York State Comptroller Alan G. Hevesi on October 8, 2004, ruled the state pension system would treat same sex couples, involving a state employee, who legally marry in a Canadian province in the same manner as married couples of the opposite sex. He explained the congressional Defense of Marriage Act of 1996 applies only to same sex marriages in other states. Courts in sister states commenced to be faced with petitions for dissolutions from persons united in a civil union in Vermont since July 2000. To be eligible for dissolution of a civil union in Vermont, one party must be a resident of the state for one year. Courts in other states have to wrestle with the question whether they have authority to dissolve a union. A Connecticut judge in 2002 dismissed a petition for dissolution on the ground the state does not recognized a civil union, but a Sioux City, Iowa, judge in 2003 granted a dissolution petition. On March 24, 2004, Essex County Probate and Family Court Judge John Cronin granted a petition for dissolution of a Vermont civil union, the first such dissolution granted in Massachusetts. The complex problems caused by Vermont’s civil union statute are illustrated by two Virginia women who decided to move to Vermont to enter a union. Frederick County Circuit Judge John R. Prosser in Virginia on August 24, 2004, voided the visitation rights order issue by a Vermont judge for Janet MillerJenkins, a current resident of Vermont, who entered into a civil union with Lisa Miller-Jenkins and Janet

later became pregnant through in-vitro fertilization. Lisa filed a petition in a Vermont court to dissolve the civil union and establish parental rights. The Virginia ruling was based on the ground Virginia law supersedes Vermont law because Lisa and her daughter reside in Virginia.

Interstate Compacts Section 10 of Article I of the U.S. Constitution authorizes a state to enter into a compact with one or more sister states with the consent of Congress. In 1893, the U.S. Supreme Court (148 U.S. 503 at 520) opined the consent requirement applies only to political compacts encroaching upon the powers of the national government. A compact may be bilateral, multilateral, section, or national in membership, and may be classified as advisory, facility, flood control and water apportionment, federal-state, promotional, service provision or regulatory. There are 26 functional types of compacts administered by a commission or by regular departments and agencies of party states.2 Recent developments include congressional consent (116 Stat. 2981) for an amendment to the New Hampshire-Vermont Interstate School Compact stipulating debts to finance capital projects may be incurred when approved by a majority vote at an annual or special district meeting of voters conducted by a secret ballot. The newly drafted Interstate Compact for Juveniles was enacted first by the North Dakota Legislative Assembly on March 13, 2003, and its lead has been followed by 20 additional state legislatures in 2003 and 2004. Enactment by 35 state legislatures is required for activation. Arkansas is dissatisfied with the Interstate Compact on the Placement of Children because each of the 50 member states has individual laws pertaining to participation in the compact, thereby causing bureaucratic delays. The Registered Nurses and Licensed Practical or Vocational Nurses Interstate Compact dates to 1998 when Utah Gov. Michael O. Leavitt signed Senate Bill 149 enacting the compact subsequently enacted by 20 additional state legislatures. The National Council of State Boards of Nursing on August 16, 2002, approved an Advanced Practice Registered Nurses Interstate Compact. The Utah Legislature on March 15, 2004, became the first state to enact this compact. State legislatures regulated the business of insurance until 1944 when the U.S. Supreme Court (322 U.S. 533, 64 S.Ct. 1162) opined the business was interstate commerce. Congress, reacting to pressure from states, enacted the McCarran-Ferguson Act of 1945 (59 Stat. 33, 15 U.S.C. §1011) overturning the court’s decision by devolving authority to states to regulate the insurance industry. Unhappy with the The Council of State Governments

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INTERSTATE RELATIONS continuation of nonharmonious state regulation of the industry, insurance companies lobbied Congress to preempt specific areas of state insurance regulatory authority. The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Financial Modernization Act of 1999 (113 Stat. 1353, 15 U.S.C. §6751) preempted 13 specific areas of state insurance regulation and threatened to establish a federal system of licensing insurance agents if 26 states did not establish a uniform licensing system by November 12, 2002. This threat was averted when 35 states were certified as having such a system on September 10, 2002. Recognizing the continuing threat of preemption, the National Association of State Insurance Commissioners drafted the Interstate Insurance Product Regulation Compact creating a commission with regulatory authority and the Utah State Legislature in 2003 enacted the compact and its lead has been followed by eight other state legislatures. Fortynine state legislatures enacted the Producer Licensing Model Act and 39 states implemented state licensing reciprocity. A deadlock on the Republican River Interstate Compact Administration led to the U.S. Supreme Court on May 19, 2003, settling an original jurisdiction dispute—Kansas v. Nebraska and Colorado (538 U.S. 720, 123 S.Ct. 1898)—involving the failure of Nebraska to deliver water to Kansas by issuing a decree approving the final settlement stipulation executed by the parties and filed with the special master on December 16, 2002. It provides “all claims, counterclaims, and cross-claims for which leave to file was or could have been sought…prior to December 15, 2002, are hereby dismissed with prejudice…” Kansas anticipated the court would order Nebraska to pay up to $100 million in damages. Other developments relating to the interstate compact device include continuing pressure for restoration of the Northeast Dairy Compact that became inactive on October 1, 2001, when Congress refused to extend its consent for the compact. A number of prominent certified public accountants are advocating a CPA interstate licensing compact and the Section on Administrative Law of the American Bar Association in 2003 established a committee to draft an administrative procedure act compact for interstate compact commissions. The California, Delaware, District of Columbia, Idaho, Indiana, Mississippi, Montana, Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Texas and West Virginia state legislatures enacted the Interstate Enforcement of Domestic Violence Protection Orders Act drafted by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL). South Caro38

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lina in 2004 amended the NCCUSL’s Uniform Electronic Transaction Act to grant U.S. Postal Service’s electronic postmark the same legal validity and enforceability as certified or registered mail. Forty-six states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands have enacted the uniform act. NCCUSL’s Uniform Trust Code was enacted by 10 states and the District of Columbia, but the Arizona Legislature repealed the code because of complaints it endangers estate plans, favors creditors, and invades the privacy of families. The Colorado and Oklahoma state legislatures in 2004 rejected the code. Twentythree state legislatures, however, enacted the Streamlined Sales and Use Tax Interstate Agreement.

Interstate Administrative Agreements State legislatures have delegated broad discretionary authority to department heads to enter into administrative agreements with their counterparts in sister states. Numerous such agreements, formal written and verbal, are in effect, but it is impossible to determine the precise number. The 39 states operating lotteries became aware the larger the jackpot the larger the ticket sales. Twentyeight states participate in the Multi-State Powerball Lottery formed by an administrative agreement between the states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands; 11 states participate in the Mega Millions Lottery; seven states operate the Big Game Lottery; three states participate in the Tri-State Megabucks Lottery; and three states are members of Lotto South. Recent developments include the 2003 decision by the Texas Lottery Commission to become a member of Mega Millions Lottery, the 2004 decisions of Maine and Tennessee to join the Powerball Lottery, and the newly established Tennessee Lottery Board in 2003 terminating negotiations with the Georgia Lottery Corporation to form a joint operation because of fears lawsuits would reduce the amount of money available for scholarships. Attorneys general continue to form cooperative administrative partnerships to conduct investigations and file lawsuits against companies. Their greatest success in terms of a settlement was the recovery of $246 billion in Medicaid costs from five tobacco companies. The settlement does not require manufacturers of other brands, often sold at a major discount from regular brands, to contribute to the escrow account in each state. In consequence, 35 states by 2004 established directories of brands approved for sale. Other developments include legal actions in May 2004 by the attorneys general of Connecticut, New


INTERSTATE RELATIONS Jersey and New York, and the Pennsylvania secretary of environmental protection against Allegheny Energy, Inc., based in Pennsylvania, for emitting air pollution causing smog, acid rain, and respiratory problems in Pennsylvania and the other suing states. Eight states and the city of New York in 2004 filed suit against several electric energy companies operating 174 fossil fuel plants emitting annually an estimated 640 tons of carbon dioxide, the first suit targeting and seeking to reduce such emissions. Joint actions by attorneys general in 2004 also resulted in Medco agreeing to pay $29.3 million to settle complaints by 20 states the company violated consumer protection and mail fraud statutes by switching patients to more expensive drugs and a group of rare stamp dealers agreeing to create a $680,000 restitution fund to settle a lawsuit brought by California, Maryland and New York charging them with a 20-year conspiracy to rig stamp auctions. Seven states—Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin—in 2004 joined as amici curiae a lawsuit filed in December 2003 by a number of environmental groups seeking to force EPA to initiate actions to prevent foreign fish and plant species from invading the Great Lakes. The EPA responded that it is working with the U.S. Coast Guard to implement the National Invasive Species Act to prevent introduction of exotic species through ballast water discharge. The New England Compact Assessment Program was established by New Hampshire, Vermont and Rhode Island in 2004 as a common system for measuring student achievement and save money. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in 2004 approved plans by five states—Alaska, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire and Vermont—to pool their purchasing powers in order to obtain larger discount on prescription drugs for their Medicaid recipients. Illinois, Indiana, Maine, New Hampshire and Virginia have joined the E-Zpass consortia, an electronic toll network for motor vehicles extending from the Canadian border to the Mid-Atlantic States and the Midwest. Arizona and New Mexico signed the first interstate homeland security agreement. And the governors of Montana, Oklahoma, Oregon and Washington launched a multi-state AMBER alert web portal designed to distribute to law enforcement officers and others information about an abducted child and the suspected perpetrator(s). In 1991, the Pacific Northwest Economic Region (PNWER) was established by the state legislatures of Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Oregon and Washington, provincial legislatures of Alberta and British Colum-

bia, and legislature of the Yukon Territory. PNWER created in 2001 the Partnership for Regional Infrastructure Security that launched several initiatives to improve the security of all types of infrastructure. The Multistate Anti-Terrorism Information Exchange (MATRIX), an interstate administrative agreement, appears to be dissolving. Utah on March 25, 2004, became the eighth state to drop out of the agreement. Florida, Michigan, Ohio and Pennsylvania remain as members. MATRIX promoters were convinced the computer-driven program would integrate data and information from criminal records, driver’s licenses, vehicle registrations, etc. Concerns over privacy were expressed by the American Civil Liberties Union, Electronic Privacy Information Center, and Electronic Frontier Foundation. Taxation Developments Many interstate controversies involve taxation and the courts are called upon to resolve them because of the failure of Congress to initiate remedial legislation.3 Resource rich states levy severance taxes that are passed along to consumers in sister states. The differential in the excise tax rates for cigarettes and alcohol has led to significant tax revenue loss by high tax states whose residents make purchases in neighboring states. So-called jock taxes levied by states on professional athletes are increasing in number and affect interstate relations. And Congress’s decision to phase out its inheritance tax is encouraging wealthy citizens to establish residence in tax friendly states. The Excise Tax Problem Recent sharp state excise tax increases for cigarettes in a number of states offered new incentives for buttleggers and are responsible for the dramatic increase in the number of domestic and foreign online sellers of cigarettes who are required by law to report sales to state tax officials, but who seldom do so and cite the Internet Nondiscrimination Act of 2001 (115 Stat. 703, 47 U.S.C. §151) which expired in 2003. Congress, however, enacted the Internet Tax Freedom Act of 2004 (118 Stat. 2615, 47 U.S.C. §809). Cigarette sales and excise tax revenues in Delaware and New Hampshire increased dramatically as nonresidents made additional purchases in these states to avoid high excise taxes in their home states levied to discourage smoking. Congress enacted the Jenkins Act of 1949 (63 Stat. 844, 15 U.S.C. §375) prohibiting use of the postal service to evade excise tax payments, but a violation is a misdemeanor. U.S. attorneys prefer to prosecute violators under the Mail Fraud Act of 1909 (35 Stat. The Council of State Governments

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INTERSTATE RELATIONS 1088, 18 U.S.C. §1341) as a violation is a felony. In 2004, the U.S. Bureau of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested 10 persons and charged them with trafficking in a multi-billion dollar black market in counterfeit major brands of tobacco products made in Asia. ICE and the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF) have stepped up their enforcement efforts as reflected in the seizure of 79,277 cartons of counterfeit and genuine cigarettes in fiscal year 1998 and 225,981 cartons in fiscal year 2003. Jock Taxes These taxes date to 1991 when the California Legislature extended its income tax to the Chicago Bulls basketball team members and the Illinois General Assembly retaliated by levying a jock tax on nonresident professional athletes who are residents of a state levying a similar tax. Twenty states, Puerto Rico, Alberta and six cities impose such a tax on professional athletes. The nature of the tax varies with New York levying its personal income tax on a nonresident athlete based upon his income and the number of games played in the state in contrast to other states which based their respective income tax on the basis of the athlete’s income and the number or preseason training days, practice days, and game days. Estate Taxes Congress enacted the Federal Revenue Act of 1926 (44 Stat. 9) providing taxpayers an 80 percent credit against the federal inheritance and estate tax for a similar tax paid to a state. The purpose of the act was to encourage state legislatures to enact a uniform tax based upon the national tax. In revising the internal revenue code in 2001, Congress increased the exemption from the federal estate tax and reduced the tax credit to 75 percent in 2002, 50 percent in 2003, 25 percent in 2004, and 0 percent in 2005. Nineteen states levy an estate tax with exemptions ranging from $675,000 in Rhode Island and Wisconsin to $3,100,000 in Ohio. Congress’ decision encourages wealthy individuals to establish residence in the 25 states not levying an estate tax and/or make gifts prior to their deaths. Intangible Holding Companies The 1992 U.S. Supreme Court in Quill Corporation v. North Dakota (504 U.S. 298, 112 S.Ct. 1904) ruled a state may not tax a corporation lacking a substantial nexus (physical presence) in a state. This decision encouraged certain national retail corporations to create intangible holding companies (passive in40

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vestment companies) in states, particularly Delaware, not taxing royalty income. Such a corporation assigns its trademarks to its intangible holding company and it leases the trademarks to retailers who pay a fee to the company. Where allowed, the retailer takes advantage of a deduction of the fee, thereby reducing its gross corporate income subject to tax and state tax revenues. In 2004, Louisiana filed suits against Toys “R” Us Incorporated and Wal-Mart Stores Incorporated seeking corporation income taxes avoided by means of the intangible holding company. Sixteen states have responded by enacting statutes establishing a combined income reporting system utilizing a formula to determine the in-state taxable income of a corporation. Eight other states enacted more limited statutes forbidding a corporation to deduct payments made to an intangible holding company in a sister state or include payments to the intangible holding company in the total taxable income of a corporation. Corporations with intangible holding companies have lobbied state legislatures not to enact statutes designed to prevent tax avoidance and governors to veto such bills. In 2003, the governor of Maryland vetoed such a bill.

Interstate Commerce Disputes between states over interstate commerce trade barriers date to the Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union which failed to provide a mechanism for resolving the disputes. The drafters of the U.S. Constitution decided it was essential to grant Congress plenary power to regulate interstate commerce (Art. I, §8) in order to make more perfect the economic and political union. The assumption apparently was made that Congress would enact a statute, backed by the Supreme Law of the Land clause (Art. VI), invalidating any interstate trade barrier established by a state statute or a regulation based upon a state’s police, proprietary, and taxation powers. Congress, however, did not enact a major statute based upon its interstate commerce power until Congress enacted An Act to Regulate Commerce (24 Stat. 379, 49 U.S.C. §1) in 1887. References often were made to the silence of Congress during the 19th century and even today Congress has not exercised fully its power to regulate commerce between sister states. In consequence, heavy reliance historically has been placed upon courts to remove barriers not susceptible to removal by negotiations between party states. Congress since 1965 has exercised its power of preemption to remove completely or partially regulatory authority from states. Republican control of Congress, commencing in 1995, slowed only slightly


INTERSTATE RELATIONS the pace of enactment of preemption statutes: 33 were enacted between 1995 and 1999 and 41 were enacted between 2000 and 2004. Recent statutes designed to remove or prevent erection of trade barriers include the Internet Nondiscrimination Act of 2001 (115 Stat. 703, 47 U.S.C. §1151), Public Company Accounting Reform and Corporate Responsibility Act of 2002 (116 Stat. 746, 15 U.S.C. §7201), Real Interstate Driver Equity Act of 2002 (116 Stat. 2342, 49 U.S.C. §10101), and Fair and Accurate Credit Transactions Act of 2003 (117 Stat. 108, 15 U.S.C. §1601). A major dispute involves the direct interstate shipment of wine to consumers and raises the question whether the dormant interstate commerce clause supersedes the grant of authority to states to regulate the sale and consumption of alcoholic beverages by the 21st Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th Circuit in 2003 in Heald v. Engler (342 F.3d 517 at 524) reversed the decision of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan granting summary judgment in favor of Michigan’s scheme regulating the sale of wines by holding the state regulation is a constitutionally benign product of the state’s three-tier regulatory system and consequently a valid exercise by the state of its 21st Amendment authority. The appeals court specifically ruled the Michigan “regulatory scheme treats out-of-state and in-state wineries differently, with the effect of benefiting the in-state wineries and burdening those from out-of-state.” A New York state law requiring wineries to sell their products through New York state wholesalers was challenged; 25 other states have similar laws or regulations. Judge Richard M. Berman of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District (232 F.Supp.2d 135 at 144) on November 12, 2002, held the New York law to be an unconstitutional barrier to interstate commerce because the exceptions for New York wineries allowed them to avoid wholesalers, and thereby allowed them to sell wines at a lower price. On February 13, 2004, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit (358 F.3d 228) reversed Judge Berman’s decision and opined New York’s regulatory scheme “is within the ambit of the powers granted to States by the 21st Amendment. New York’s regulatory scheme allows licensed wineries, whether in state or out of state, direct access to a market of sophisticated oenophiles” and hence “(t)he scheme does so in a nondiscriminatory manner, while targeting valid state interests in controlling the importation and transportation of alcohol.” Challenges based upon the Privileges and Immunities Clause and the First Amendment also were rejected. The U.S. Supreme Court in

October 2004 agreed to hear appeals of the two Circuit Court decisions.

Summary and Conclusions The Massachusetts Supreme Court’s decision legalizing same sex marriages and the Vermont General Assembly’s enactment of a same sex civil union statute will continue to result in controversies in sister states lacking a defense of marriage act relative to enactment of such an act and to raise questions whether courts in these states possess authority to dissolve a Massachusetts same sex marriage or a Vermont same sex civil union. In general, interstate cooperation continues to be excellent as additional states enact interstate compacts and enter into interstate administrative agreements on a wide variety of subjects. Compacts, agreements and enactment of harmonious regulatory laws have been promoted as means to discourage Congress from exercising its powers of preemption removing regulatory authority completely or partially in specified fields from states. Nevertheless, we conclude disparate state regulatory statutes and regulations, increasing globalization of the domestic economy, international trade treaties, lobbying by interest groups, and technological developments will result in Congress enacting preemption statutes in addition to the 522 enacted since 1790.

Notes 1 Massachusetts Laws of 1913, Chapter 360, Section 2, and Massachusetts General Laws, Chapter 207, Section 11. 2 Joseph F. Zimmerman, Interstate Cooperation: Compacts and Administrative Agreements, (Westport, CT: Praeger Publishers, 2002) and Ann O’M. Bowman, “Trends and Issues in Interstate Cooperation,” The Book of the States 2004, (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2004), 34-40. 3 Consult Joseph F. Zimmerman, Interstate Economic Relations (Albany, NY: State University of New York Press, 2004).

About the Author Joseph F. Zimmerman is a professor of political science at Rockefeller College of the State University of New York at Albany. He is the author of numerous books including Federal Preemption: The Silent Revolution (1991), Contemporary American Federalism: The Growth of National Power (1992), State-Local Relations (1995), Interstate Relations: The Neglected Dimension of Federalism (1996), Interstate Cooperation: Compacts and Administrative Agreements (2002) and Interstate Economic Relations (2004).

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Interstate Compacts: Trends and Issues By John Mountjoy and Melissa Bell Interstate compacts are a uniquely American invention, allowing multistate problem-solving in the face of complex public policy and federal intervention. This article provides a brief history of compacts, examines a 2004 survey of interstate compact administrators and briefly looks at new and emerging policy areas in which interstate compacts may play an important role. Finally, it describes The Council of State Governments’ new service developed as a result of this work—the National Center for Interstate Compacts. Despite their legal and structural differences, states share many common problems in a world in which economic and political issues are often discussed in global terms. As we become more integrated socially, culturally and economically, the volume of these issues will only increase and interstate compacts may be the perfect mechanism for developing state-based solutions to supra-state problems.1 The last two decades have seen a resurgence in the development of new interstate compacts and the revision of existing compacts. Interstate compacts can provide states the means to address state problems with state solutions, thus avoiding federal intervention and preemption.

Interstate Compacts: Brief History Interstate compacts are powerful, durable and adaptive tools for promoting and ensuring cooperative action among the states. Unlike federally imposed mandates, interstate compacts provide state-developed solutions to complex public policy problems. Interstate compacts are contracts between states that carry the force and effect of statutory law and allow states to perform a certain action, observe a certain standard or cooperate in a critical policy area. Generally speaking, interstate compacts: establish a formal, legal relationship among states to address common problems or promote a common agenda; create independent, multistate governmental authorities (e.g., commissions) that can address issues more effectively than a state agency acting independently, or when no state has the authority to act unilaterally; establish uniform guidelines, standards or procedures for agencies in the compact’s member states; create economies of scale to reduce administrative costs; respond to national priorities in consultation or in partnership with the federal government; 42

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retain state sovereignty in matters traditionally reserved for the states; and/or settle interstate disputes.2 Between 1783 and 1920, states approved 36 compacts, most of which were used to settle boundary disputes. But in the last 75 years, more than 150 compacts have been created, most since the end of World War II. They apply to a range of subject areas from conservation and resource management to civil defense, education, emergency management, energy, law enforcement, probation and parole, transportation and taxes.3 While the theory and purpose behind interstate compacts have changed little over the last 229 years, modern compacts differ greatly from their earlier and simpler cousins, tackling broader public policy issues and forging state partnerships for problem-solving and cooperation. What also differs is the way in which compacts are structured. Unlike federal actions that generally impose unilateral and rigid mandates, compacts afford states the opportunity to develop dynamic, self-regulatory systems, of which the member states can maintain control through a coordinated legislative and administrative process. Compacts also enable the states to develop adaptive structures that can evolve to meet new and increased challenges that naturally arise over time. In short, through the compact device, states acting jointly cannot only control the solution to a problem but can also shape the future response as the problems to be addressed change. Modern compacts are a reinvigoration of our federalist system in which states may only be able to preserve their sovereign authority over interstate problems to the extent that they share their sovereignty and work together cooperatively through interstate compacts.4

Interstate Compact Survey: Findings In February 2004, The Council of State Governments (CSG) conducted a 50-state survey of inter-


INTERSTATE RELATIONS state compacts. This in-depth survey sought detailed information on compact administrators’ interstate compact experiences, the experiences of their state in regards to compacts and their assessment of current needs in the compact field. Compact administrators handle the day-to-day operations of more than 200 interstate agreements. The purpose of this survey was to learn more about this group and the services they may need. Individual compacts and their compact administrators were identified using CSG’s Interstate Compacts & Agencies 2003 directory.5 From an initial sample size of 479 administrators representing 47 different compacts, 226 surveys were returned for a response rate of 51 percent.6 All states and the District of Columbia were represented in these responses. The vast majority (97.3 percent) of the administrators in the sample are full-time employees of their compacts. Most of them (75.7 percent) have at least one additional employee who works with them on compact administration. Most of the compact administrators in this study (76.6 percent) have not been involved with any other compact, so their current

involvement in their respective compacts is the only compact-related experience they have. Interstate compacts can be viewed as a four-stage process. All compacts go through the stages of development, enactment, implementation and administration. Each of these stages presents their own set of challenges and obstacles. Compact Development The first stage is compact development. During this stage, compact proponents identify stakeholders, analyze the needs of the states involved, determine the purpose of the compact and decide on the components of the compact. The compact’s language is drafted in this phase, and proponents must determine if congressional consent is needed.7 To get a sense of the difficulty that administrators face in compact development, respondents were asked about the obstacles encountered during this stage. These are illustrated in Figure A. The most common obstacle cited was educating legislators and other state officials about compacts; 42.2 percent of respondents thought

Figure A: Obstacles to Compact Development Determining need for Congressional consent Networking with counterparts

Obstacles

Defining compact mission and purpose

■ Yes ■ No ■ Unsure

Obtaining input from potential stakeholders Balancing compact jurisdictions with state sovereignty Determining funding needs and revenue sources Drafting language Educating legislators and officials

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Percentage of Respondents Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, February 2004.

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INTERSTATE RELATIONS this was an impediment in their compact’s development phase. Another obstacle cited by 39.5 percent of respondents was the difficulty in drafting the language of the compact. Other common obstacles were determining funding needs and revenue sources as well as balancing the compact’s jurisdiction with member state sovereignty, identified respectively by 35.3 percent and 33.8 percent of the respondents. Compact Enactment The second stage of the interstate compacts process is compact enactment. When one state, typically by statute, adopts the terms of a compact requiring approval by one or more states in order to take effect, this is considered an offer. When other states adopt identical compact language, this is considered acceptance. When the required number of states adopts the compact, the contract is deemed valid. During the compact enactment stage, proponents take

steps to make sure the compact becomes law in their respective states so that the contract is validated. Respondents were asked about obstacles faced during this phase. These are highlighted in Figure B. As with compact development, more than 40 percent of respondents thought educating state legislators and other state officials about compacts was an obstacle. More than a third felt that promoting the compact within their respective states for enactment was problematic. And almost a third of respondents felt that determining funding needs and obtaining support from organizations that might be affected by the compact were obstacles during this phase of the interstate compacts process. Compact Implementation The third stage of the interstate compacts process is compact implementation. After the compact becomes law, proponents must establish the structures

Figure B: Obstacles to Compact Enactment Networking with counterparts

Balancing compact jurisdictions with state sovereignty

Obstacles

Promoting compacts to other states Dealing with modifications to compact language Obtaining support from affected organizations Determining funding needs

■ Yes ■ No ■ Unsure

Promoting compact within state Educating legislators and officials

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

Percentage of Respondents Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, February 2004.

44

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50%


INTERSTATE RELATIONS and procedures to administer the compact. This phase involves a great deal of logistical work. Administrators were asked about obstacles to compact implementation (see Figure C). Unlike the other two stages of the interstate compacts process, there was only one obstacle in the third stage that was cited by more than 30 percent of the respondents. Almost a third of respondents felt that determining staffing needs was problematic. Compact Administration Compact administration is the final stage of the process in which compact administrators oversee the daily operations of the compact and execute the compact provisions. Obstacles to this stage are highlighted in Figure D. More than half of administrators believed that dealing with enforcement and compliance of the compact’s terms are obstacles in the compact administration stage. As in the development and enactment stages,

educating legislators and state officials was once again one of the top-cited obstacles. It was identified as an obstacle by 39.8 percent of the administrators. And 37.8 percent of the administrators felt that promoting their compacts within their own states was problematic at this stage. Types of Support to Aid the Interstate Compacts Process The administrators were also asked to think about the needs of their current compacts and what types of support would be helpful to them. Their responses to potential kinds of support are outlined in Table A. Although networking with counterparts in other states was not considered a major obstacle in any of the four stages of the interstate compact process, the most popular type of support among administrators was the desire for an outside organization to help provide networking opportunities for administrators. Compact administrators typically do not communi-

Figure C: Obstacles to Compact Implementation

Determining staffing needs

Obstacles

Establishing administrative oversight

Hiring staff

Determining compact’s place in state organizational structure

■ Yes ■ No ■ Unsure

Networking with counterparts

Securing office space

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

60%

Percentage of Respondents Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, February 2004.

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INTERSTATE RELATIONS cate with their colleagues who administer other interstate compacts, usually limiting their networking to the close-knit circle of experts who administer their particular compact in other states. Perhaps administrators want to expand their networking opportunities outside their own compact. The majority of compact administrators also identified the need for assistance in the legal interpretation of compact requirements with more than half wanting non-technical explanations of compact requirements. This response stems directly from the facts that compact administrators typically are not attorneys and that few states offer comprehensive and timely legal assistance to compact administrators. Many of the administrators expressed a need for common tools for use during the compact process, including administrative functions and structures, compact performance evaluation and new technological tools for sharing information across state lines. Further, by examining and sharing best practices in

the field of compact administration, states could be able to streamline compact functions, eliminating redundancy and promoting some standardization in operations for a state’s many compacts. Administrators also liked the idea of a third party to help build coalitions to promote and support compacts and the concept of a clearinghouse of information related to compacts. They also thought it would be useful to have information on the impact that legislative and regulatory activity at the federal level would have on their compacts. In addition, they want help with determining the costs associated with their compacts as many compact offices operate on shoestring budgets and may not be able to meet the demands of the compact. More than 40 percent of the respondents want help with revising their existing compact. When asked directly “Is there need to make changes to your existing compact?” 46.2 percent of them said yes. This is significant in that it indicates that the body of ex-

Figure D: Obstacles to Compact Administration Dealing with labor issues regarding staff licensing

Dealing with litigation

Obstacles

Networking with counterparts Balancing compact jurisdictions with state sovereignty Dealing with modifications to compact language

Promoting compact within state

Educating legislators and officials Dealing with enforcement and compliance 0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

Percentage of Respondents Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, February 2004.

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60%

70%

80%


INTERSTATE RELATIONS ties play in homeland security efforts. Emergency Medical Assistance—Prior to the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, Percentage who thought Type of support it would be useful states had already made great headway in adopting interNetworking opportunities for administrators ........................................................................... 72.7% state agreements such as the Legal interpretation of compact requirements ......................................................................... 71.5 Emergency Management AsCommon tools for use during compact process ....................................................................... 65.0 sistance Compact (EMAC) to Coalitions to promote and support compacts ........................................................................... 61.0 cope quickly with natural and Information clearinghouse about compacts ............................................................................. 61.0 other disasters. States have Non-technical explanations of compact requirements ............................................................ 52.3 now realized the need for Monitoring/evaluation of federal activities’ impacts on compacts ......................................... 52.1 more than just the sharing of Help with determining all costs associated with compacts ..................................................... 47.5 equipment and resources for Help with revising existing compact ........................................................................................ 43.7 physical clean-up, which EMAC provides. They now Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, February 2004. see the dramatic need for interstate cooperation for medical assistance. States currently have no mechaisting compact law is outdated or in need of an overnism to facilitate nonfederal interstate emerhaul. While a majority of regulatory compacts were gency medical assistance in the event of a developed in the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, the world nuclear, biological or chemical attack. has evolved at a much faster pace since then. As such, Elder Guardianship—A July 2004 GAO report CSG has seen firsthand the need to revise agreements indicated an emerging need to protect incapaciwhose purposes are quite relevant, but whose intertated elderly adults.8 The report highlighted spenal mechanisms require modification and modernization. Further, aged interstate compacts often recific breakdowns in collaboration between states quire updates to their purpose and policies. What was and federal programs that jeopardized the safety taken as sound policy in the 1950s may or may not of seniors, specifically in the areas of state court be relevant today, and issues that we take for granted operation, accountability and consistency; state today were not considered in previously. jurisdictional fluctuations; a lack of systematic information- sharing between and among varyInterstate Compacts: On the Horizon ing agencies and levels of government; and a lack of adequate tracking of elder guardianship As current policy areas evolve and new ones statistics. emerge, interstate compacts will likely play a sig Metropolitan-Border Area Compacts—Massive nificant role in the future of multistate problem-solvurban growth in the last several decades now reing. With the federalism dynamic in flux, responsiquires states to work together, as never before, bilities are shifting both to and from the states. Interon behalf of cities and sprawling bi- or tri-state state compacts offer a flexible solution to these ismetropolitan areas. Issues such as education, ecosues, giving states the ability to solve problems renomic development and tourism, and homeland gionally and nationally. security/public safety have evolved beyond the Emerging areas ripe for interstate cooperation traditional borders of the city and state and now include: encompass multiple states as a single metro area Intelligence/Criminal Justice Information Sharon a wider basis. Examples include the Cincining—While efforts such as the Global Justice nati/Northern Kentucky/Eastern Indiana area, Information Sharing Initiative sponsored by the Chicago/Northwestern Indiana, St. Louis/SouthU.S. Department of Justice seek to establish western Illinois, and Portland/Southern Washingstandards and mutual understanding of the inton areas. While the interstate compact has been formation sharing process, no true interstate used sparingly in this area, notably the Washmechanism currently exists to allow multi-juington Area Metro Transit system and the New risdictional access to criminal justice informaYork/New Jersey Port Authority, emerging and tion. This issue becomes much more significant changing policy issues may require states to work when one considers the role states and locali-

Table A: Most Popular Types of Compact-Related Support

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48

on behalf of cities in the creation of new or expanded interstate agreements. Bioterrorism Preparedness—Regional cooperation for bioterrorism preparedness is on the minds of many state officials. Mass casualty events, multistate training and prearranged payment provisions, chain-of-command issues and identified roles for key players are critical to an effective response. While other agreements may tackle broader cooperation issues, specific agreements might be crafted to promote independent regional responses based on a region’s unique needs. State Professional Licensing—Currently, 46 professions are licensed at the state level, and these professions are evolving due to cultural and technological changes as well as increased mobility. With this in mind, states may need to cooperate further on consolidating state licensing standards and procedures. A recent analogous example is the Interstate Insurance Product Regulation Compact that was developed to streamline the introduction of new insurance products into states. Rather than dealing with separate state laws regulating insurance products, the new compact makes it much easier and quicker for products to come to market and meet the stringent demands of states. As of the end of 2004, the new insurance compact had been adopted in nine states. National Animal ID—With the growing concern about mad cow disease, both state and federal government officials are looking at new challenges to the traditional means of tagging and tracking livestock. While tracking an individual animal is currently feasible, it takes far too long and in the event of an outbreak, it would limit the ability of officials to quickly and accurately find an animal’s point of origin. An interstate compact developed by states with input from relevant federal agencies may be a viable solution to the collection and sharing of vital information in a timely fashion. Voter Registration Information—The Help America Vote Act of 2002 specifically details what and how voter registration information is to be collected and stored. However, it makes no reference to sharing and coordinating such data between states to ensure that a citizen votes only once and in the appropriate jurisdiction. This issue is particularly relevant when one considers that between 1995 and 2000, more than 11 million people moved between states.9 An interstate compact could alThe Book of the States 2005

low member states to share voter registration information quickly and accurately.

Conclusion In response to the needs of the interstate compact community (as partly identified by the survey) and the need to aid states in the formulation of solutions to emerging policy issues, CSG has created the National Center for Interstate Compacts. An information clearinghouse, training and technical assistance provider and primary facilitator in helping states manage the compact process, the center promotes the use of interstate compacts as an ideal tool to meet the demand for cooperative state action, to develop and enforce stringent standards, and to provide an adaptive structure for states that can evolve to meet new and changing demands over time. The goals of the National Center for Interstate Compacts are to: educate stakeholder groups, compact staff, and state and local officials on the background, history, legality, structure, mechanics and use of interstate compacts; provide technical assistance to states in determining the need for new interstate compacts and to examine and, where appropriate, revise existing interstate agreements; and assist states in streamlining administrative structures and procedures, promoting the use of technology in compact activities, gaining federal support for their compact efforts, and creating standards for compact operations and rules and regulation development and publishing. For more information on interstate compacts and the National Center for Interstate Compacts, please visit: www.csg.org (keyword: interstate compacts).

Notes 1 Michael L. Buenger and Richard L. Masters, “The Interstate Compact for Adult Offender Supervision: Using Old Tools to Solve New Problems,” The Roger Williams University Law Review, 1, 9 (Fall 2003). 2 Michael H. McCabe, Interstate Compacts: Background and History, (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 1997). 3 William K. Voit, Interstate Compacts and Agencies, 1998, (The Council of State Governments, 2000). 4 See note 1 above. 5 William Kevin Voit, Nancy J. Vickers and Thomas L. Gavenois, Interstate Compacts & Agencies 2003, (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2003). Much


INTERSTATE RELATIONS of the contact information was found and/or verified using Internet searches. 6 The sample excluded compacts that are administered by separate interstate commissions, boundary compacts and compacts that have not been signed onto by more than one state; 35 were deemed ineligible. 7 Today, it is well established that only those compacts that affect a power delegated to the federal government or alter the political balance within the federal system, require the consent of Congress. 8 Guardianships: Collaboration Needed to Protect Incapacitated Elderly People, GAO-04-655, July 2004. 9 Census 2000 Special Reports: Domestic Migration Across Regions, Divisions and States—1995 to 2000, Censr-7, (U.S. Census Bureau, U.S. Department of Commerce, August 2003).

About the Authors John Mountjoy is the director of CSG’s National Center for Interstate Compacts. He managed CSG’s national effort on the Interstate Compact for Adult Offender Supervision and currently oversees the revision of the Interstate Compact for Juveniles and the Interstate Compact for the Placement of Children. He holds a Masters in Public Administration and a B.A. in Communications from Western Kentucky University. Melissa Bell is the associate director of research for CSG. She is the author of several Trends Alerts on various topics, including immigration, fiscal affairs and medical malpractice. She has a Ph.D. in public policy from the University of Kentucky.

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FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

The Geographic Distribution of Federal Funds By Edward N. Trevelyan The U.S. Census Bureau’s Consolidated Federal Funds Report is a key source of government spending data, including not only agency and program detail, but also the geographic distribution of funds. This article provides details and insights into the make-up and significance of this flow of federal funds on state and local areas. egory are three highly visible, and often politically With domestic expenditures of $2.06 trillion in charged programs. Social Security, Medicare and federal fiscal year 2003, the United States govern- Medicaid accounted for $955 billion, or 46 percent ment spent nearly as much as the combined outlays of all U.S. government domestic spending. Debate over budget items is informed by substanof the 90,000 state and local governments in the United States.1 As the president’s FY 2006 budget tive policy details, including the degree to which fedbegins its journey through the congressional review eral dollars are perceived to affect local economies. process, there is renewed interest in the relative merits The Census Bureau provides an important window into this geographic distribution of federal funds of countless federal funding programs. through its annual Consolidated Federal Funds Report (CFFR). This report covers most domestic spending by the federal government, tracked to recipients at the Table A state, county, and in some cases, local TOP 10 FEDERAL PROGRAMS, EXCLUDING LOANS AND INSURANCE levels. The largest item not covered is (Sorted by descending amount) the interest payment on the federal debt, which cannot be meaningfully assigned Code Program Amount by geographic area. The balance of this 96.002 Social Security Retirement Insurance $305,159,678,337 article will provide details and insights PC.100 Procurement Contracts—Department of Defense 201,229,509,585 93.778 Medical Assistance Program 167,790,232,644 into the make-up and significance of 93.773 Medicare—Hospital Insurance 152,257,430,553 these flows of federal funds. 93.774 Medicare—Supplementary Medical Insurance 121,796,655,308

Introduction

PC.200 96.004 96.001 SW.500 DO.200

Procurement Contracts—All Federal Government Agencies other than Defense and USPS Social Security Survivors Insurance Social Security Disability Insurance Salaries and Wages—All Federal Government Civilian Employees except Defense and USPS Unemployment Compensation Benefit Payments

112,525,535,206 93,304,326,390 77,146,762,769

The effects on the economy of this annual outflow of federal funds go well beyond the nearly $441 billion in grants, primarily to state and local governments. The $327 billion in defense and nondefense procurement contracts have equally profound impacts upon economic indicators nationwide, as do the $211 billion in salaries and wages paid to military and civilian employees. It is, however, the over $1 trillion in direct payments to individuals and others that has come to really drive federal spending and ultimately its effect on the national economy. In FY 2003, over 50 percent of the entire federal domestic budget was distributed under these “direct” programs. Dominating this catThe Book of the States 2005

The Consolidated Federal Funds Report covers federal government expenditures or obligations for the categories listed below. For FY 2003, amounts reported totaled $2.1 trillion for the direct expenditure or obligation categories (items 1 thorough 5, below) and $966 billion for other federal assistance (items 6 through 8):

76,829,390,816 51,146,482,437

Source: U.S. Census Bureau.

50

CFFR Report Coverage

1. Retirement and disability ($636 billion) 2. Other direct payments ($446 billion) 3. Grants ($441 billion) 4. Procurement contracts ($327 billion) 5. Salaries and wages ($211 billion) 6. Direct loans ($34 billion) 7. Guaranteed or insured loans ($227 billion) 8. Insurance ($705 billion)


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES Dollar amounts reported under these categories can represent either actual expenditures or obligations. As a general guide, the grants and procurement data in this report represent obligated funds, while direct payments, salaries and wages represent actual expenditures (outlays). Data on loan and insurance programs (categories 6 through 8) generally represent the contingent liability of the federal government. Because the latter categories represent available funds or “coverage,” they are excluded in calculations of “total direct expenditure or obligation” (the $2.1 trillion referred to above). Amounts Excluded From CFFR Coverage Federal expenditures excluded conceptually are those that cannot be geographically distributed, all international transactions and foreign payments, and federal outlay categories not covered by any of the reporting systems that served as data sources for the CFFR. The largest item was net interest on federal government debt, which was estimated to be $153 billion in FY 2003. The fiscal year 2003 total outlays for the international affairs function in the federal budget were estimated at $21 billion. For some agencies, data for selected object categories could not be obtained. These include the procurement actions of the judicial and legislative sectors of the federal government. Expenditures other than salaries and wages are not available for the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, National Credit Union Administration, and Federal Saving and Loans Insurance Corporation. Expenditures for the Central Intelligence Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, and the National Security Agency also are excluded from coverage, or otherwise not separately identifiable.

The federal budget outlays estimated for FY 2003 totaled $2.0 trillion. However, comparison of the federal budget amount with data reported in the CFFR can be misleading, since the federal budget amounts differ from CFFR in accounting concepts and the treatment of intragovernmental transfers. For example, outlays for many programs in the federal budget are reported on a net basis, whereas the CFFR reports gross outlays or obligations to nonfederal recipients. Summary of Methodology This is a consolidated report, developed by bringing together available statistics on federal government expenditures or obligations. The first phase of the CFFR program is to identify the available data sources. The following reporting systems and agencies are used as primary data sources: ■

Federal Assistance Award Data System

Department of Defense

General Services Administration—Federal Procurement Data System

Office of Personnel Management

U.S. Postal Service

In addition to these primary sources, several other federal agencies are requested to provide data, usually for selected programs. Most of these are agencies that do not report under the requirements of the Federal Assistance Award Data System.

Relationship to Federal Assistance Award Data System

The Federal Assistance Award Data System (FAADS) is a quarterly report of financial assistance awards made by each federal agency. Coverage includes most (but Table B not all) grants, direct payments to individuTOP 10 FEDERAL RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY PROGRAMS als and others, loans, (Sorted by descending amount) and insurance coverCode Program Amount age. Data submitted by 96.002 Social Security Retirement Insurance $305,159,678,337 federal agencies for the 96.004 Social Security Survivors Insurance 93,304,326,390 FAADS serve as the pri96.001 Social Security Disability Insurance 77,146,762,763 DR.200 Federal Retirement and Disability Payments—Civilian 49,602,931,073 mary source for most of DR.100 Federal Retirement and Disability Payments—Military 33,428,532,000 the statistics in the 96.006 Supplemental Security Income 32,494,880,366 64.109 Veterans Compensation for Service-Connected Disability 20,622,188,731 CFFR. The FAADS 57.001 Social Insurance for Railroad Workers 8,836,027,975 does not provide infor64.110 Veterans Dependency and Indemnity Compensation for SVC-Connected Death 3,773,936,752 64.104 Pension for Non-Service-Connected Disability for Veterans 2,489,932,193 mation on either salaries Source: U.S. Census Bureau. and wages or procurement contracts. All The Council of State Governments

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FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES Table C TOP 10 FEDERAL OTHER DIRECT PAYMENT PROGRAMS (Sorted by descending amount)

Table Descriptions and Data Sources

Total Expenditure: $2.1 trillion Code Program Amount All amounts in Table 2.3 are aggregates from 93.773 Medicare—Hospital Insurance $152,257,430,553 93.774 Medicare—Supplementary Medical Insurance 121,796,655,308 the data included in DO.200 Unemployment Compensation Benefit Payments 51,146,482,437 Tables 2.4-2.9. These DO.300 Federal Government Payments for Excess Earned Income Tax Credits 33,210,791,000 10.551 Food Stamps 21,421,437,521 are national and state DX.200 Federal Employee Life/Health Insurance Premium Payments—Employer Share 17,177,036,989 area summaries of the 84.063 Federal Pell Grant Program 12,079,460,332 10.450 Crop Insurance 5,922,366,683 federal expenditure obDX.550 Temporary State Fiscal Relief Fund 4,999,999,000 ject categories (1 10.055 Production Flexibility Payments for Contract Commodities 4,232,389,246 through 5) identified Source: U.S. Census Bureau. above under “CFFR Report Coverage.” The “Total Expenditure” amount does not include data CFFR data not obtained through the FAADS are otheron contingent liabilities (loans and insurance, from wise obtained from federal agencies. categories 6 through 8), which are separately listed Data on financial assistance awards are submitted in Table 2.9. quarterly by federal government agencies. The Census Bureau collects these data and combines them to form a single quarterly database on federal govern- Retirement and Disability: $636 billion ment financial assistance awards. Each quarterly daIn the CFFR, data covering federal government tabase is distributed to the Congress and to state govdirect payments are separated into two object caternments. In addition to grant awards, the FAADS egories: direct payments for retirement and disabilprogram covers direct payments to individuals (such ity benefits (Table 2.4), and all other direct payments as retirement benefits), direct payments for specified (Table 2.5). Retirement and disability programs inuse (such as food stamp awards), direct loans, guarclude federal employee retirement and disability benanteed loans and insurance coverage of the federal efits, Social Security payments of all types, selected government. All financial assistance awards covered Veterans Administration programs, and selected other in the FAADS are identified by a Catalog of Federal federal programs. Domestic Assistance (CFDA) program number (or a Except as indicated below, data in Table 2.4, are pseudo code, if a CFDA number is unavailable). compiled from amounts reported by the federal agenFor grants, the FAADS data represent the federal cies for the FAADS. The following retirement and obligation incurred at the time the grant is awarded. disability direct payment programs are not available The amounts reported do not represent actual expenfrom the FAADS, but are obtained from other data ditures, since obligations in one time period may not sources. result in outlays during the same time period. Moreover, initial amounts obligated may be adjusted at a ■ Military retirement benefits data are supplied by the Department of Defense. later date, either through enhancements or de-obligations. These de-obligations may appear in the ■ Coast Guard retirement benefits data are obtained CFFR data as negative amounts. Users should be from the U.S. Coast Guard (now a unit of the aware of what these amounts represent and use care Department of Homeland Security) and the Ofin interpreting such data. fice of Personnel Management (OPM). For FY 2003, the CFFR derived data from the ■ Federal civilian employee retirement and disabilFAADS by summing the four quarterly reports that ity payment data are obtained from the Compencovered financial assistance awarded between Octosation Group, OPM. ber 1, 2002, and September 30, 2003. All program ■ Pension plan termination insurance payment data awards identified in FAADS are reported by state, are provided by the Pension Benefit Guaranty county, and (in certain cases) city of recipient. SubCorporation (PBGC). mitting federal agencies use either FIPS codes for states, counties and places, or General Services Ad- ■ Public Health Service (PHS), Commissioned ministration location codes. Corps retirement data are reported by the PHS. 52

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FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES ■

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Commissioned Corps data are provided by the U.S. Coast Guard, Pay and Personnel Center.

Foreign Service Officers retirement data are provided by the State Department.

The Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) retirement data are reported by the TVA.

Other Direct Payments: $446 billion

Table D TOP 10 FEDERAL GRANT PROGRAMS (Sorted by descending amount) Code 93.778 20.205 14.871 93.558 84.027 84.010 10.555 93.600 83.516 93.767

Program Medical Assistance Program Highway Planning and Construction Section 8 Housing Choice Vouchers Temporary Assistance for Needy Families Special Education—Grants to States Title I Grants to Local Education Agencies Natonal School Lunch Program Head Start Disaster Assistance State Children’s Insurance Program (CHIP)

Amount $167,790,232,644 36,005,167,720 20,947,329,022 17,367,393,624 8,848,672,262 8,384,322,863 7,035,861,276 6,526,419,518 5,555,554,783 5,383,757,064

Amounts shown in Table 2.5 come from the FAADS, except for those programs Source: U.S. Census Bureau. listed below. Direct payments for individuals are reported by state and county area only. The following other direct payment programs are not available from the FAADS, but are data represent the federal obligation incurred at the time the grant is awarded. obtained from other data sources. ■

Excess earned income tax credit data are reported by the Department of the Treasury, Internal Revenue Service, Statistics of Income Division.

Crop Insurance data on the amount of indemnity payments (claims) and premium subsidies are provided by the Agriculture Department.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency provides data for payments under the National Flood Insurance program.

Legal Services Corporation provides annualized grant and contract payment data.

U.S. Postal Service expenditures for current operations, other than procurement and salaries and wages, are provided by the Postal Service as part of that agency’s total submission for CFFR.

Data for the federal government (employer) share of premiums on federal employee life and health insurance are provided by the OPM, Compensation Group.

The Education Department reports payments under the Federal Family Education Loan program.

Statistics on federal expenditures for unemployment compensation are compiled from information obtained from the Department of Labor.

The Office of Justice Programs provides data for payments under the Public Safety Officers’ Benefit Program of the Department of Justice.

Grants: $441 billion The principal source of the grants data in the CFFR (about 98 percent of all grants reported) is the information submitted quarterly for the FAADS. These

Procurement: $327 billion Statistics in Table 2.7 are provided by the U.S. Postal Service (USPS) for Postal Service procurement and by the Federal Procurement Data Center (FPDC) within the General Services Administration for procurement actions of nearly all other federal agencies, including the Defense Department. The FPDC collects procurement statistics on a quarterly basis from most federal government departments and agencies, and provides these data according to the place of performance rather than the location of the prime contractor. Excluded from the procurement totals reported are the amounts for the judicial and legislative branches of government and most intergovernmental transfers of funds. Also excluded from the totals are amounts for procurement in foreign countries. Procurement data awarded by the USPS include all outlays made under formal contractual agreements. The FPDC data include contractual actions for construction, purchases of equipment, and other purchases of tangible items by the federal government. Also included with the FPDC data are contractual actions for services often not generally associated with procurement, such as the purchase of utilities, building leases, and other services entered into via contractual agreement. Salaries and Wages: $211 billion Amounts reported for federal government salaries and wages are from four sources: the Department of Defense, the OPM, the USPS, and the U.S. Coast Guard (within the Department of Homeland Security). Amounts reported include salaries and wages, housing allowances, and in general all other personThe Council of State Governments

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FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES Table E FEDERAL PROCUREMENT PROGRAMS (Sorted by descending amount) Code PC.100 PC.200 PC.300

Program

Amount

Procurement Contracts—Department of Defense Procurement Contracts - All Federal Government Agencies other than Defense and USPS Procurement Contracts—U.S. Postal Service

$201,229,509,585 112,525,535,206 13,658,031,503

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

nel compensation, except retired military pay, which is included in the CFFR’s Retirement and Disability Category. Amounts for military personnel stationed overseas are also excluded from totals. Direct Loans, Guaranteed Loans, and Insurance: $823 billion All data on loans and insurance programs of the federal government, with the exception of data on flood insurance and student loan programs, come from the FAADS. Flood insurance data are provided by Federal Emergency Management Agency, a unit of the Homeland Security Department. Student loan data are provided by the Department of Education. Loan and insurance program amounts in Table 2.9 reflect the volume of loan or insurance activities. These amounts represent either direct loans made to certain categories of borrowers, or the federal government contingent liability for loans guaranteed and direct insurance against loss. Loans and insurance data do not represent actual expenditures associated with the loan or insurance programs. Any actual outlays under these programs, such as insurance claims paid by the federal government, appear in the direct payments categories in the CFFR. Federal government contingent liability can vary by program, and caution should be used in comparing one federal loan or insurance program to another, or in interpreting the data presented to reflect actual federal outlays over time.

Statistical Calculations Per capita federal expenditure amounts in Table 2.10 are computed using resident populations as of July 1, 2003. Percentage distributions of federal expenditures in Table 2.11 are computed based on U.S. expenditure totals in each object category. The Defense Department and other agency expenditure amounts in Table 2.12 are computed from data in Tables 2.4 through 2.9. Figures for all Department of Defense agencies are tallied to arrive at a total for Department of Defense expenditures. This 54

The Book of the States 2005

total is then netted from the grand total of federal government expenditures, and the residual categorized as nondefense expenditures. This procedure is followed for each state and outlying area. The defense/nondefense totals are then used to compute per capita and percent distribution amounts, using the procedure described above for Tables 2.10 and 2.11. Data in Table 2.12 in the column on Energy Department defense-related activities are from the Department of Energy, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Defense programs. These data represent defenserelated atomic energy activities, and are presented on an exhibit basis only. Since the data are for the Department of Energy, they are included in the columns for “All other federal agencies,” rather than Department of Defense. Per capita state rankings in Table 2.13 are derived from per-capita figures shown in Table 2.10. The District of Columbia and the outlying areas are excluded from the rankings.

Geographic Coverage and Presentation The CFFR report presents data by state and county area. The District of Columbia and the Outlying Areas of American Samoa, Federated States of Micronesia, Guam, Republic of the Marshall Islands, Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, Republic of Palau, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and the U.S. Virgin Islands are included. In addition to county areas, municipal governments that are independent of any organized county are included in the CFFR as county equivalent areas. It is important to note that the CFFR covers federal government payments to all types of recipients, both government and other, located in the geographic areas over which these governments have jurisdiction. For example, the federal payments to the New York City area could represent monies allocated to the city government, a private company located in the city, or a private citizen residing in the city. No attempt is made in the CFFR to provide information on the re-


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES cipients (individually or by type) of federal money. For most programs, information on recipients and recipient types (and other details) can be found in the FAADS.

Estimates for Substate Grant Distributions Many federal grant programs involve a direct payment to state governments, which are then responsible for program administration. Examples include: grants that are “passed through” to local governments (such as block grant programs); grants in which the financial impact of federal funds is spread out over all areas of the state, such as those for highway construction; and grants or assistance programs such as Low Income Home Energy Assistance, which the state can administer but for which the ultimate beneficiaries are found throughout the state. The CFFR contains data on the substate allocation of funds for a selection of major grant programs of this “passed through” variety. Substate geographic distributions are obtained through a periodic survey conducted by the Census Bureau. To the extent possible, these data are allocated by county or county-equivalent area. Substate allocation figures for these programs are available for some, but not all, of the states and outlying areas.

More is not Always Better All things being equal (which they rarely are), the receipt of a relatively high level of federal funds to a state or local area is desirable. In the competition for federal dollars and the perceived attainment of “receiving a fair share” of these funds, one must be mindful of the bases for “qualifying” for many assistance programs. If federal funds are received for purposes such as improving the health and quality of life of our children or seniors, or providing for national de-

fense and homeland security, these are generally recognized as positive outcomes. Similarly, if the funds received are to provide educational opportunities, improved housing, or a cleaner environment, that too would be welcomed by most citizens. On the other hand, if federal funds are awarded to a geographic area due to “undesirable” circumstances, then these receipts might actually have negative connotations. Some examples of situations where the qualification for federal funds would be undesirable include: high crime rate; low student achievement; deteriorating infrastructure (roads, bridges, water and sewer systems, etc.); homelessness; low income or poverty; high unemployment; polluted land, water and air; crop failures; or disasters. If an area is receiving federal funds for these latter reasons, then clearly, more is not better. While taxpayers are naturally curious about the degree to which taxes are “returned” to their geographic area (whether it be region, state, county, city or congressional district), it is important that they are mindful of this distinction between positive and negative “triggers” for federal funding. Similarly, economists, policy analysts, and other researchers must carefully weight their “balance of payment” models to account for these distinctions. Otherwise, such models have little intrinsic value, and can lead to misperceptions about the impact of taxation and federal assistance. Furthermore, technical and statistical limitations must be carefully considered when CFFR data are used to bolster arguments about the impact of federal funds. While CFFR’s geographic orientation can be enormously useful in identifying broad regional trends, it can produce misleading conclusions at the “micro” level unless the limitations are kept in mind. Among these limitations are the following: ■

CFFR data represent expenditures or obligations to government and non-government recipients in state, county and county-equivalent areas. These data cannot, in any consistent and meaningful way,

Table F FEDERAL SALARY AND WAGE PROGRAMS (Sorted by descending amount) Code SW.500 SW.600 SW.100 SW.400 SW.200 SW.700

Program

Amount

Salaries and Wages - All Federal Government Civilian Employees Except Defense and USPS Salaries and Wages—U.S. Postal Service Salaries and Wages—Department of Defense (Active Military Employees) Salaries and Wages—Department of Defense (Civilian Employees) Salaries and Wages—Department of Defense (Inactive Military Employees) Salaries and Wages—U.S. Coast Guard (Uniformed Employees)

$76,829,390,816 50,428,120,500 46,908,385,000 27,336,125,000 7,445,634,000 1,729,656,933

Source: U.S. Census Bureau

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FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES face growing pressure to shoulder a higher proportion of government services. Prescription drugs and other health care costs continue to outpace the rate of inflation and the traditional revenues that Code Program Amount once supported them. Medicaid cost in97.002 Flood Insurance $661,793,028,787 creases alone threaten to outpace state 14.117 Mortgage Insurance Homes 147,385,534,704 10.450 Crop Insurance 40,064,741,244 revenues. Retiring workers of the baby 84.032 Federal Family Education Loans 28,132,568,336 boom generation will soon impose new 84.268 Federal Direct Student Loans 22,072,946,267 64.114 Veterans Housing Guaranteed and Insured Loans 13,970,795,714 pressures on the solvency of the Social 14.133 Mortgage Insurance Purchase of Units in Condominiums 10,661,965,649 Security system. 59.012 Small Business Loans 8,110,128,255 10.051 Commodity Loans and Loan Deficiency Payments 7,424,473,761 Adding to these challenges are the fis10.410 Very Low to Moderate Income Housing Loans 4,165,519,838 cal pressures emanating directly or indiSource: U.S. Census Bureau rectly from the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Many of the resources needed to address the resultant homeland be generalized to congressional district geographies. While there is a handful of instances in security concerns must originate at the state and lowhich the boundaries of counties (and even en- cal levels. Areas of significant concern include traintire states and outlying areas) coincide with con- ing and equipping police, fire and emergency medigressional district boundaries, the predominant cal first-responders; security for borders, ports and relationship is one of “cross-cutting” bound- waterways, airports, and communications networks; aries. Because most data are reported to the food and water safety; and vaccinations against biocounty level of geography, they are of little value logical and chemical agents. Against this backdrop of economic and security in determining district-level expenditures. Such precision might be possible, but only with more concerns, as well as new budgetary limitations imposed by federal tax cuts and defense-related spendprecise reporting. ing increases, the level and focus of federal assis■ While every effort is made in the CFFR to portray tance to state and local governments will be closely an accurate and meaningful geographic distribu- watched. As competing economic and fiscal agention of federal funds, there are notable instances das and budget priorities are debated, the Census in which the geographic coding of federal funds Bureau’s CFFR data will continue to provide a valumay not match the true “place of performance.” able research and reference resource. This problem is dealt with effectively by the careful data collection processes of several CFFR Notes “feeder” agencies, such as the OPM, the FPDC 1 U.S. Census Bureau, Consolidated Federal Funds Reand the USPS. However, current resource limita- port, FY 2003, http://www.census.gov/govs/www/ tions prevent universal application of such pro- cffr03.html; U.S. Census Bureau, Survey of State and Locesses (or the alternative of highly detailed post- cal Government Finances, FY 2001-2002, http:// collection editing). Perhaps the most recognizable www.census.gov/govs/estimate/9299ussl_1.html; U.S. Cenoutgrowth of this limitation is a tendency for grant sus Bureau, 2002 Census of Governments, http:// www.census.gov/govs/www/gid2002.html. coding to reflect corporate or “headquarters” addresses, to the detriment of more meaningful distribution data. About the Author Table G TOP 10 FEDERAL LOAN AND INSURANCE PROGRAMS (Sorted by descending amount)

Looking to the Future As we enter the 21st century, what are the dynamics, priorities and realities that will determine the demographic and economic future of the United States? In contrast to the “exuberance” of the 1990s, the economic climate is far more cautious, if not “guardedly optimistic.” In this era of federal belt-tightening, states

56

The Book of the States 2005

Edward N. Trevelyan is a survey statistician with the Federal Programs Branch, Governments Division, Bureau of the Census, U.S. Department of Commerce. Acting as the executive agent of the U.S. Office of Management and Budget, this office is responsible for several projects and studies on the geographic distribution of federal funds, and also serves as the Federal Audit Clearinghouse for collecting and disseminating audits and related data on the use of federal awards.


FEDERAL AID

Table 2.1 TOTAL FEDERAL GRANTS TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS BY STATE AND REGION: 1995–2003 (In millions of dollars) State or other jurisdiction

2003

2002

2001

2000

1998

1997

1996

1995

United States ......................

$441,038

$412,371

$338,977

$308,530

$294,469

$269,128

$229,778

$227,542

$228,936

Eastern Region Connecticut .......................... Delaware .............................. Maine ................................... Massachusetts ...................... New Hampshire ................... New Jersey ........................... New York ............................. Pennsylvania ........................ Rhode Island ........................ Vermont ................................ Regional Total ......................

$5,376 1,181 2,610 13,328 1,865 11,481 47,575 18,624 2,234 1,331 105,605

$5,279 1,121 2,270 12,339 1,632 10,822 42,461 18,017 2,094 1,281 97,316

$4,364 892 1,905 9,718 1,288 8,478 32,897 14,487 1,607 1,069 76,705

$4,033 838 1,770 9,070 1,238 7,876 31,564 13,940 1,574 929 72,832

$3,846 825 1,664 8,838 1,120 7,262 28,870 13,141 1,411 883 67,860

$3,653 678 1,602 8,019 1,042 7,108 28,066 12,381 1,368 803 64,720

$2,905 629 1,378 6,365 842 6,602 24,384 10,268 1,144 601 55,118

$3,080 600 1,389 6,813 890 6,506 24,560 10,117 1,176 641 55,772

$3,195 560 1,315 6,829 866 6,639 24,348 10,354 1,276 625 56,007

Midwestern Region Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................. Iowa ...................................... Kansas .................................. Michigan .............................. Minnesota ............................ Nebraska .............................. North Dakota ....................... Ohio ...................................... South Dakota ....................... Wisconsin ............................. Regional Total ......................

$15,720 7,313 3,877 3,415 12,970 6,914 2,512 1,537 15,687 1,698 7,544 79,187

$14,975 6,969 4,060 3,272 13,279 6,492 2,342 1,425 14,844 1,506 7,255 76,419

$11,883 5,850 3,079 2,721 10,887 5,260 2,054 1,284 11,762 1,254 5,843 61,877

$11,228 5,108 2,714 2,323 10,107 4,753 1,720 1,101 10,665 1,088 5,254 56,061

$10,586 4,706 2,595 2,183 9,764 4,499 1,651 1,009 10,254 1,056 4,842 53,145

$10,156 4,152 2,424 1,934 8,618 4,199 1,511 1,067 9,733 1,007 4,697 49,498

$9,296 3,539 1,977 1,620 7,237 3,952 1,227 1,074 8,327 982 3,617 42,848

$9,229 3,657 2,030 1,700 7,194 3,535 1,232 734 8,776 867 3,679 42,633

$9,487 3,546 2,074 1,649 7,589 3,685 1,440 768 9,115 813 3,729 43,895

Southern Region Alabama ............................... Arkansas ............................... Florida .................................. Georgia ................................. Kentucky .............................. Louisiana .............................. Maryland .............................. Mississippi ........................... Missouri ............................... North Carolina ..................... Oklahoma ............................. South Carolina ..................... Tennessee ............................. Texas .................................... Virginia ................................ West Virginia ....................... Regional Total ......................

$6,649 4,541 17,463 10,561 6,634 7,820 8,632 5,318 8,655 11,613 5,136 5,969 9,057 28,423 7,886 3,562 147,919

$6,344 4,047 16,350 10,500 6,346 7,437 6,312 5,046 8,429 10,939 5,108 5,592 8,658 24,858 7,714 3,298 136,978

$5,298 3,448 13,666 7,929 5,100 6,173 7,586 4,246 6,868 9,122 4,119 4,730 7,027 21,675 5,908 2,971 115,866

$4,833 2,778 12,149 7,520 4,687 5,300 6,911 3,517 5,939 8,158 3,583 4,163 6,372 18,346 5,163 2,729 102,148

$4,632 2,614 11,191 6,752 4,395 5,228 5,744 3,387 5,478 7,608 3,231 3,879 5,900 18,370 4,749 2,490 95,648

$4,161 2,440 10,320 6,233 4,236 4,708 5,022 3,025 5,065 7,133 3,059 3,525 5,510 15,809 4,423 2,480 87,149

$3,483 2,283 8,504 5,469 3,702 4,457 3,950 2,626 4,231 6,284 2,510 2,987 4,555 13,184 3,518 2,100 73,843

$3,325 2,131 8,442 5,359 3,355 4,734 3,544 2,754 4,091 5,227 2,435 3,032 4,476 13,287 3,403 2,088 71,683

$3,419 2,019 9,078 5,461 3,437 5,291 3,594 2,738 4,159 5,487 2,472 3,027 4,531 13,338 3,504 2,074 73,629

$3,022 7,235 51,329 6,014 1,911 1,858 1,938 1,955 4,322 5,103 2,845 8,881 1,616 98,029

$3,127 6,664 48,084 4,740 1,835 1,837 1,912 1,840 3,954 4,814 2,697 8,296 1,234 91,034

$2,314 5,190 39,797 3,916 1,514 1,505 1,665 1,442 3,586 4,308 2,244 6,794 1,213 75,488

$2,174 4,704 36,080 3,591 1,348 1,270 1,474 1,340 3,032 3,684 2,065 6,345 1,022 68,129

$1,929 4,537 36,370 3,446 1,335 1,177 1,399 1,249 2,750 3,518 1,994 5,720 933 66,357

$1,427 4,147 32,090 3,048 1,190 1,055 1,139 1,081 2,547 3,275 1,727 5,422 850 58,998

$1,303 3,355 27,014 2,444 1,184 936 991 983 2,152 2,853 1,355 4,496 762 49,828

$1,051 3,095 26,413 2,410 1,126 887 964 876 1,942 2,797 1,446 4,152 708 47,867

$1,125 3,150 26,934 2,391 1,162 849 933 882 1,866 2,763 1,318 4,351 748 48,472

46,700

42,950

35,691

32,049

29,987

26,908

22,814

21,454

21,538

4,310 110 136 400 66 89 51 4,808 282 43

4,832 93 126 251 58 66 41 4,828 266 65

4,020 58 94 176 48 60 35 3,899 111 183

4,675 59 ... 138 ... 47 ... 3,842 195 10

5,293 131 ... 188 ... 54 ... 5,284 216 248

4,101 91 ... 266 ... 39 ... 3,895 256 116

2,740 121 ... 125 ... 35 ... 3,719 371 1,032

2,578 71 ... 134 ... 31 ... 3,387 373 3,009

2,238 73 ... 162 ... 41 ... 3,535 217 592

Western Region Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................. California ............................. Colorado ............................... Hawaii .................................. Idaho .................................... Montana ............................... Nevada ................................. New Mexico ......................... Oregon .................................. Utah ...................................... Washington .......................... Wyoming .............................. Regional Total ...................... Regional total without California ............ Dist. of Columbia ................ American Samoa ................. Fed. States of Micronesia ..... Guam .................................... Marshall Islands .................. No. Mariana Islands ............ Palau ..................................... Puerto Rico .......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............. Undistributed .......................

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census. Consolidated Federal Funds Report for Fiscal Year 2003, issued September 2004.

1999

Key: . . .—No data available.

The Council of State Governments

57


FEDERAL AID

Table 2.2 FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In millions of dollars) Department of Agriculture Cooperative State Research and Extension Service State and outlying area

Agricultural Marketing Service

Total

USDA Total

Food and Safety Inspection Service

United States, total ..........

$385,693,169

$22,101,978

$506,272

$998,125

$429,069

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

5,895,622 2,407,114 7,028,362 3,850,593 46,210,746

377,373 105,757 394,608 242,986 2,753,094

6,507 1,194 12,950 8,017 57,618

31,472 8,270 11,418 20,064 43,690

16,415 2,948 3,714 8,451 12,823

$569,056

$3,330

$45,601

15,057 5,322 7,704 11,613 30,867

128 0 109 94 47

1,347 0 687 153 102

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

4,232,375 4,482,708 1,024,668 17,256,091 8,949,450

231,744 155,264 57,134 972,874 692,081

7,715 3,232 1,095 19,700 9,118

19,561 8,936 7,564 27,832 31,758

5,674 3,630 2,847 10,756 12,556

13,887 5,306 4,717 17,076 19,202

97 0 0 40 0

54 0 376 0 3,063

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

1,515,334 1,651,106 13,999,628 6,282,796 3,382,945

110,286 108,887 770,178 324,709 199,256

1,776 2,440 16,669 6,480 2,867

17,692 7,645 20,893 21,648 29,175

2,207 2,185 8,929 10,565 12,102

15,485 5,460 11,964 11,083 17,073

0 3 63 71 327

0 0 4,069 1,716 1,197

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

2,758,845 5,968,259 6,486,491 2,404,349 6,329,819

181,968 338,472 451,640 84,457 271,002

5,499 8,228 19,458 2,441 4,534

15,982 24,247 18,278 9,418 19,563

7,861 13,464 8,800 4,160 10,502

8,121 10,783 9,478 5,258 9,061

410 0 0 0 32

1,883 163 1,855 71 0

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

9,840,765 11,513,627 5,710,257 4,926,928 7,139,839

290,876 565,171 341,397 359,216 383,951

4,925 24,065 6,909 6,081 10,098

13,377 29,340 25,500 26,526 27,397

4,155 12,784 13,148 11,413 12,476

9,2ĂĽ22 16,556 12,352 15,113 14,921

26 33 332 0 94

0 0 627 977 411

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

1,434,638 2,079,263 1,911,493 1,424,871 10,169,482

101,827 134,766 98,485 53,376 400,199

3,597 3,350 2,216 2,885 7,440

14,422 16,841 4,809 5,342 11,241

4,814 7,526 1,796 1,959 4,700

9,608 9,315 3,013 3,383 6,541

0 245 14 0 0

522 20 0 0 385

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

3,765,693 43,463,311 10,066,509 1,203,215 13,232,799

209,342 1,410,386 617,469 69,293 627,633

7,308 30,982 10,592 3,544 15,508

9,751 38,295 40,835 11,497 29,353

3,799 14,600 18,913 4,944 11,650

5,952 23,695 21,922 6,553 17,703

63 0 0 299 0

555 329 3,137 169 5,374

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

4,726,105 4,715,818 16,654,854 1,854,940 4,913,647

337,490 404,706 664,758 61,359 330,058

20,175 7,435 13,053 1,571 4,904

18,369 16,838 26,618 4,274 16,860

9,259 6,104 13,949 2,592 9,601

9,110 10,734 12,669 1,682 7,259

293 0 0 0 0

1,567 0 59 0 1,459

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

1,376,298 8,152,838 24,352,768 2,337,320 1,184,613

82,888 413,154 1,876,613 164,391 58,988

6,567 9,867 34,465 2,291 1,973

9,957 23,409 48,220 11,071 7,915

4,624 13,081 23,299 4,220 2,470

5,333 10,328 24,921 6,851 5,445

96 0 61 14 0

746 0 4,778 1,094 434

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

6,200,198 7,474,125 3,301,375 6,772,649 1,420,298

280,043 428,393 159,598 315,929 41,527

9,558 11,182 4,378 7,838 951

23,504 20,051 13,226 28,307 5,783

11,546 6,249 6,918 11,863 1,647

11,958 13,802 6,308 16,444 4,136

0 68 0 253 18

1,361 0 670 3,519 295

District of Columbia ........ American Samoa .............. Fed. States of Micronesia Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ..............

3,633,268 130,776 122,159 230,096 58,401

54,122 21,926 1,912 18,973 17

2,280 54 0 166 0

2,286 1,151 1,725 2,118 0

1,004 549 1,097 762 0

1,282 602 628 1,356 0

0 0 0 0 0

254 0 0 0 0

Northern Marianas ......... Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ....................... Virgin Islands ................... Undistributed ...................

87,299 46,676 4,695,055 344,986 906,616

14,243 137 1,744,421 115,116 24,059

23 0 6,548 49 23,906

1,055 0 12,806 2,950 0

647 0 7,013 1,309 0

408 0 5,793 1,641 0

0 0 0 0 0

49 0 74 0 0

See footnotes at end of table

58

The Book of the States 2005

Extension activities

Research and education activities

Farm Service Agency

Total


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Agriculture—Continued Forest service

Food and nutrition service

State and outlying area

Nutrition service total

United States, total ...... $19,245,996

Child nutrition programs

Commodity Food assistance stamp programs program (a)

Special Needy supplemental family food program program (WIC)

Forest Service total

Payments to State and National states and private Forest counties forestry Service Other

$10,424,165

$165,055

$4,013,337

$96,045

$4,547,394

$559,888

$358,546

$185,771

Alabama ...................... Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ Arkansas ...................... California ....................

317,087 57,600 344,206 194,386 2,527,276

202,683 29,740 212,968 122,716 1,329,573

3,366 293 3,932 1,481 14,946

33,573 7,742 32,532 22,989 347,047

1,329 333 1,407 1,021 8,220

76,136 19,492 93,367 46,179 827,490

3,443 17,705 10,731 8,243 74,972

2,015 8,875 7,057 5,988 62,163

1,428 7,859 3,229 2,219 6,062

$4,365 $11,206 0 0 0 0 2,284

0 971 445 36 4,463

Colorado ...................... Connecticut ................. Delaware ...................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................

171,786 136,161 45,953 886,813 625,034

95,214 75,639 27,332 587,708 403,338

2,535 1,320 616 5,251 3,850

26,856 26,388 8,077 88,333 74,269

646 728 251 3,574 1,838

46,535 32,086 9,677 201,947 141,739

12,501 0 332 5,864 4,681

5,433 868 0 2,366 1,231

6,915 0 332 3,498 3,449

21 0 0 0 0

132

Hawaii .......................... Idaho ............................ Illinois .......................... Indiana ......................... Iowa .............................

82,871 70,608 693,593 279,789 145,807

42,283 42,636 412,816 172,577 88,756

913 658 7,073 2,892 2,263

12,966 8,962 94,181 40,914 19,788

229 329 2,961 1,680 789

26,480 18,023 176,562 61,726 34,211

1,471 24,189 4,403 1,974 1,101

0 20,022 287 123 0

1,471 4,167 1,932 1,851 876

0 0 46 0 217

0 0 2,138 0 8

Kansas ......................... Kentucky ..................... Louisiana ..................... Maine ........................... Maryland .....................

149,679 279,705 394,761 57,540 238,359

103,489 178,145 252,461 35,851 142,339

836 3,245 7,549 1,511 1,885

13,620 30,781 48,132 8,477 36,086

1,131 1,286 1,934 300 1,895

30,603 66,248 84,685 11,401 56,154

1,940 3,363 6,497 8,047 2,682

0 391 3,518 39 0

1,926 2,972 2,979 8,008 2,682

0 0 0 0 0

14 0 0 0 0

Massachusetts ............. Michigan ...................... Minnesota .................... Mississippi ................... Missouri .......................

264,780 486,937 284,518 280,969 312,319

166,067 262,820 161,107 179,435 191,281

2,318 9,427 2,934 2,246 3,083

31,642 89,394 56,594 34,164 48,492

1,934 3,681 1,895 1,064 2,037

62,819 121,615 61,988 64,060 67,426

1,368 5,186 8,673 10,566 4,556

0 2,725 3,886 7,311 2,504

1,173 2,090 2,502 3,255 1,610

195 279 329 0 268

0 92 1,956 0 174

Montana ...................... Nebraska ...................... Nevada ......................... New Hampshire .......... New Jersey ...................

58,207 105,024 86,020 36,971 376,223

31,526 66,138 49,274 20,215 198,279

1,228 1,811 621 911 3,000

11,785 14,925 11,150 5,377 93,803

555 721 227 558 3,903

13,113 21,429 24,748 9,910 77,238

21,957 2,311 3,849 1,273 2,586

12,464 40 428 220 0

9,493 2,271 3,326 1,013 2,586

0 0 95 0 0

0 0 0 40 0

New Mexico ................. New York ..................... North Carolina ............ North Dakota .............. Ohio .............................

172,839 1,311,174 529,630 43,799 566,630

114,574 724,661 333,520 24,721 299,737

1,891 12,455 3,793 768 6,347

18,471 264,580 74,988 7,809 121,992

1,606 14,319 1,548 464 2,155

36,297 295,159 115,781 10,037 136,399

7,341 6,793 14,185 1,544 1,649

2,022 8 964 0 62

4,992 6,677 13,186 1,544 1,583

0 0 11 0 0

327 108 24 0 4

Oklahoma .................... Oregon ......................... Pennsylvania ............... Rhode Island ............... South Carolina ............

277,386 214,906 594,346 53,383 281,239

168,616 108,321 300,484 31,131 188,862

2,210 2,499 6,991 332 2,795

45,367 45,220 160,545 7,389 32,232

1,379 1,143 6,576 301 769

59,814 57,723 119,750 14,230 56,581

4,186 146,931 6,576 1,631 9,084

1,214 140,987 3,665 0 3,104

2,972 5,923 2,863 1,631 5,980

0 0 14 0 0

0 21 34 0 0

South Dakota ............... Tennessee ..................... Texas ............................ Utah ............................. Vermont .......................

56,701 355,065 1,755,111 133,704 41,465

30,563 219,022 1,102,541 80,407 18,125

928 4,885 8,759 906 843

10,888 39,163 190,187 19,542 11,534

611 1,440 5,085 1,376 280

13,711 90,555 448,539 31,473 10,683

4,621 4,256 10,552 9,813 2,970

3,699 529 4,435 1,913 708

920 3,727 6,055 7,900 2,085

0 0 0 0 177

2 0 62 0 0

Virginia ........................ Washington .................. West Virginia ............... Wisconsin .................... Wyoming .....................

218,202 332,121 117,733 246,531 29,034

141,834 189,878 74,385 138,801 15,352

1,486 2,244 1,818 2,681 224

4,460 40,114 11,634 45,512 6,159

1,313 1,257 783 1,982 424

69,109 98,628 29,113 57,555 6,875

5,786 46,100 3,743 8,651 2,436

293 40,191 1,869 1,596 2,193

5,301 5,909 1,866 7,025 40

51 0 0 30 203

141 0 8 0 0

District of Columbia ... American Samoa ......... Fed. States of Micronesia .......... Guam ........................... Marshall Islands .........

47,860 20,441

24,764 8,916

968 22

10,190 5,529

475 1

11,463 5,973

1,442 280

0 0

1,292 280

145 0

5 0

0 15,511 0

0 5,960 0

0 45 0

0 2,611 0

0 349 0

0 6,546 0

187 102 17

0 0 0

187 102 17

0 0 0

0 0 0

Northern Marianas ..... Palau ............................ Puerto Rico .................. Virgin Islands .............. Undistributed ..............

12,857 0 1,715,850 111,496 0

4,429 0 176,088 14,067 0

9 0 3,387 1,775 0

8,296 0 1,359,583 90,303 0

123 0 1,633 197 0

0 0 175,159 5,154 0

259 137 675 609 0

0 0 8 0 0

259 137 667 609 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 1

See footnotes at end of table

The Council of State Governments

59


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Agriculture—Continued Rural development activites

State and outlying area

National Resources Conservation Service

Rural Develop. activities total

Community facilities grants

Rural regional, and and cooperative development programs

Housing preservation grants

Water systems and waste disposal systems systems grants

Other

Appalachian Regional Commission

United States, total ..........

$125,231

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

919 2,575 2,670 3,050 2,934

$617,535

$24,901

$38,630

$5,690

$438,957

$109,357

$35,974

16,470 18,413 11,837 8,979 46,455

379 3,724 147 255 487

899 681 913 476 1,494

50 38 59 104 134

14,851 13,899 9,172 8,055 18,329

291 71 1,546 89 26,011

4,153 8 0 0 0

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

856 0 758 3,994 1,511

19,174 6,067 1,056 28,631 16,916

112 50 34 172 579

46 53 42 929 961

55 0 30 75 292

915 5,964 950 9,855 13,189

18,046 0 0 17,600 1,895

2 0 0 0 2,588

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

4,064 308 9,327 862 8,609

2,412 3,694 21,161 12,169 10,173

250 362 404 55 1,278

19 338 3,344 328 633

79 0 268 186 0

1,366 2,981 16,035 11,599 8,226

698 13 1,110 1 36

0 0 77 0 0

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

2,285 1,307 2,894 430 1,462

4,290 21,459 7,897 6,510 4,370

57 370 618 122 107

85 1,421 442 443 952

106 288 270 113 90

3,904 14,480 5,798 5,470 2,368

138 4,900 769 362 853

0 3,437 0 0 723

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

185 606 1,143 13,845 10,535

6,215 19,004 13,695 20,252 18,541

90 666 535 1,581 532

414 1,021 2,232 616 1,556

73 239 83 44 0

5,638 17,078 8,442 16,817 16,424

0 0 2,403 1,194 29

34 0 36 3,569 0

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

589 2,127 0 0 0

2,533 4,848 1,577 6,905 2,324

302 180 50 31 347

474 274 263 69 197

32 64 0 37 20

1,569 3,630 903 6,768 1,760

156 700 361 0 0

0 27 0 0 1

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

5,648 1,540 841 2,423 33

5,837 21,273 18,249 6,018 9,086

240 264 3,543 633 264

311 2,857 1,345 740 623

70 251 391 30 183

5,216 17,488 11,424 4,501 7,594

0 413 1,546 114 422

0 2,000 2,504 0 2,126

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

4,522 135 4,181 0 643

10,992 18,461 19,925 500 15,869

416 377 268 22 202

1,680 1,027 713 115 1,466

227 92 55 0 323

5,833 8,737 18,879 363 13,793

2,836 8,228 10 0 85

1 0 4,885 0 817

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

981 2,276 7,211 709 969

3,219 18,281 16,215 5,695 3,262

331 501 154 323 119

784 1,161 684 173 455

4 206 303 0 89

2,098 16,042 9,528 4,564 2,599

2 371 5,546 635 0

0 4,728 66 0 0

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

2,311 1,947 6,058 220 1,656

19,321 16,924 13,790 20,610 1,354

1,304 48 263 1,594 42

593 1,122 346 843 49

237 0 56 84 25

16,463 9,780 10,222 17,954 1,221

724 5,974 2,903 135 17

1,010 0 2,899 7 0

District of Columbia ........ American Samoa .............. Fed. States of Micronesia ................. Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ..............

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

276 0

0 1,076 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

Northern Marianas ......... Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ....................... Virgin Islands ................... Undistributed ...................

0 0 6 0 0

0 0 8,462 12 153

0 0 0 0 117

0 0 -81 0 9

0 0 196 12 27

0 0 8,223 0 0

0 0 124 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

See footnotes at end of table

60

The Book of the States 2005


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Commerce

State and outlying area

Dept. of Economic Commerce Development total Aministration

Department of Defense

Corporation National National for National Oceanic and Telecommunications and Corporation Dept. of Atmospheric and Information Community for Public Defense Administration Administration Service Broadcasting total

U.S. Army Corps of Engineers U.S. Army civilian National construction Guard program construction

United States, total ......

$934,399

$434,480

$418,365

$81,554

$146,763

$368,206

$281,448

$8,529

$272,919

Alabama ...................... Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ Arkansas ...................... California ....................

23,300 56,928 7,096 7,589 70,771

14,457 13,541 4,143 6,939 46,697

5,866 43,051 2,197 0 20,568

2,977 336 756 650 3,506

211 1,889 3,378 3,106 32,635

2,525 6,482 4,796 1,676 35,957

6,608 6 5 493 10,802

17 1 0 493 384

6,591 5 5 0 10,418

Colorado ...................... Connecticut ................. Delaware ...................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................

11,899 10,086 2,039 24,205 16,398

2,782 3,243 0 10,981 12,326

8,812 6,540 2,039 11,004 3,751

305 303 0 2,220 321

3,738 2,572 1,693 2,835 1,031

3,976 2,270 0 12,811 5,443

3,482 10 2,774 289 1,295

0 10 0 11 1,295

3,482 0 2,774 278 0

Hawaii .......................... Idaho ............................ Illinois .......................... Indiana ......................... Iowa .............................

22,404 10,561 14,367 8,352 3,393

3,471 9,139 11,329 7,340 1,690

18,242 1,375 837 83 836

691 47 2,201 929 867

761 2,282 816 315 205

2,140 1,356 11,296 6,153 3,439

3,608 4,757 1,039 8,971 1,877

0 3 382 3 423

3,608 4,754 657 8,968 1,454

Kansas ......................... Kentucky ..................... Louisiana ..................... Maine ........................... Maryland .....................

6,210 13,694 27,074 13,693 17,399

3,459 12,982 5,411 4,137 668

0 20 19,333 7,966 15,971

2,751 692 2,330 1,590 760

3,060 4,239 0 2,172 4,980

2,813 4,357 3,219 1,577 4,382

958 868 1,891 7,193 25

267 796 8 0 25

691 72 1,883 7,193 0

Massachusetts ............. Michigan ...................... Minnesota .................... Mississippi ................... Missouri .......................

18,543 22,268 14,323 33,432 8,758

3,663 13,817 12,652 8,590 6,993

13,399 3,772 12 23,125 167

1,481 4,679 1,659 1,717 1,598

0 6,972 0 6,829 0

12,003 7,729 10,567 1,932 4,799

1,566 6,090 2,843 16,368 4,378

24 5 7 283 1,051

1,542 6,085 2,836 16,085 3,327

Montana ...................... Nebraska ...................... Nevada ......................... New Hampshire .......... New Jersey ...................

5,046 5,990 4,150 9,255 8,956

3,915 1,939 1,701 771 6,736

0 0 1,810 6,878 2,120

1,131 4,051 639 1,606 100

2,915 0 97 0 4,820

1,472 5,286 2,866 1,351 3,324

4,866 982 3,047 12,195 1,201

33 124 0 9 0

4,833 858 3,047 12,186 1,201

New Mexico ................. New York ..................... North Carolina ............ North Dakota .............. Ohio .............................

13,635 31,086 38,946 5,050 17,294

10,546 17,867 16,629 3,380 12,613

44 6,164 20,301 97 3,189

3,045 7,055 2,016 1,573 1,492

3,766 20,846 558 472 7,794

3,005 31,140 69,959 1,367 10,319

-5 13,629 1 2,470 37

1 3 1 85 37

-6 13,626 0 2,385 0

Oklahoma .................... Oregon ......................... Pennsylvania ............... Rhode Island ............... South Carolina ............

17,852 50,327 21,245 11,163 31,060

7,202 10,284 17,222 3,842 14,440

8,889 37,873 1,883 7,146 14,913

1,761 2,170 2,140 175 1,707

426 279 816 313 0

2,390 4,249 10,441 702 3,514

5,597 2,853 5,487 0 4,710

459 21 162 0 91

5,138 2,832 5,325 0 4,619

South Dakota ............... Tennessee ..................... Texas ............................ Utah ............................. Vermont .......................

5,342 11,389 38,472 4,574 3,320

3,042 10,466 23,245 4,405 2,833

21 0 11,832 0 267

2,279 923 3,395 169 220

113 3,865 214 2,594 1,034

1,484 4,707 12,328 5,160 1,351

7,876 6,762 8,330 0 695

87 474 1,311 0 0

7,789 6,288 7,019 0 695

Virginia ........................ Washington .................. West Virginia ............... Wisconsin .................... Wyoming .....................

16,966 71,426 10,615 13,083 935

8,702 7,265 9,650 4,433 922

5,907 62,627 97 6,607 8

2,357 1,534 868 2,043 5

0 1,433 141 5,581 0

12,310 5,874 1,318 7,187 857

204 3,178 12,410 4,872 -148

45 27 23 42 0

159 3,151 12,387 4,830 -148

District of Columbia ... American Samoa ......... Fed. States of Micronesia ............ Guam ........................... Marshall Islands .........

3,373 1,687

1,722 0

58 1,646

1,593 41

1,575 814

6,447 556

6 0

6 0

0 0

0 1,088 0

0 440 0

0 648 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 696 0

0 1,242 0

0 0 0

0 1,242 0

Northern Marianas ..... Palau ............................ Puerto Rico .................. Virgin Islands .............. Undistributed ..............

1,127 0 11,447 2,391 1,327

0 0 5,782 994 1,042

1,127 0 5,565 1,397 285

0 0 100 0 0

96 0 366 116 0

0 0 3,317 585 -1,054

0 0 0 0 90,755

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 90,755

See footnotes at end of table

The Council of State Governments

61


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Education Office of Vocational and Adult Education

Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services

State and outlying area United States, total ....

Office of Office of Rehabilitation Office of Vocational English Educational services and Special technical Adult education Language Research and disability research Education education and literacy Total Acquisition (b) Improvement (b) Total programs (b) (c) programs (b) Total programs (b) programs (b) $29,194,683 $502,690 $389,600 $8,710,173 $1,779,478 $6,930,695 $1,527,074 $1,039,778 $487,296

Alabama ................... Alaska ....................... Arizona ..................... Arkansas .................. California .................

468,013 141,213 696,348 321,920 4,310,597

1,291 2,465 13,083 1,371 166,829

2,364 7,487 7,418 1,066 43,586

124,049 1,429 182,388 85,030 951,227

878 976 42,790 5,696 243,995

123,171 4530 139,598 79,334 707,232

26,187 0 33,404 253 260,734

24,080 0 25,605 203 164,390

7,799 50 96,344

Colorado ................... Connecticut .............. Delaware ................... Florida ...................... Georgia .....................

422,615 325,959 105,051 1,646,297 88,952

13,909 7,103 382 31,326 339

5,868 8,296 117 16,582 2,814

134,107 94,502 34,646 614,449 3,661

27,416 266 10,598 136,457 1,335

106,691 94,236 24,048 477,992 2,326

20,217 16,310 6,338 93,252 15,782

14,238 9,957 4,821 63,644 536

5,979 6,353 1,517 29,608 15,246

Hawaii ...................... Idaho ........................ Illinois ....................... Indiana ..................... Iowa ..........................

178,407 146,466 1,391,052 510,069 308,195

3,432 2,428 25,330 5,260 2,653

353 3,442 15,161 1,360 19,441

45,763 40,603 478,262 189,906 121,125

11,982 190 102,974 189 27,075

33,781 40,413 375,288 189,717 94,050

8,314 10,217 71,601 10,569 18,844

6,272 8,268 45,640 393 14,817

2,042 1,949 25,961 10,176 4,027

Kansas ...................... Kentucky .................. Louisiana .................. Maine ....................... Maryland ..................

124,757 507,721 41,633 168,407 528,117

4,715 1,281 750 2,116 5,100

5,507 4,048 3,336 1,588 8,775

40,449 172,940 779 59,518 181,548

26,636 44,241 220 16,300 37,384

13,813 128,699 559 43,218 144,164

4,390 30,373 80 9,176 16,694

454 21,064 80 6,266 10,706

3,936 9,309 0 2,910 5,988

Massachusetts ........... Michigan .................. Minnesota ................. Mississippi ................ Missouri ....................

770,452 1,161,549 100,745 402,512 89,367

11,337 4,316 2,935 701 487

8,144 9,377 4,358 3,311 2,743

312,010 364,267 7,299 88,707 11,236

44,891 77,837 1,512 1,848 9,573

267,119 286,430 5,787 86,859 1,663

35,045 66,628 23,886 23,568 709

21,210 47,341 23,504 16,775 533

13,835 19,287 382 6,793 176

Montana ................... Nebraska .................. Nevada ...................... New Hampshire ........ New Jersey ...............

187,208 202,436 154,801 119,567 849,817

2,526 3,108 3,698 500 12,543

4,254 1,584 2,311 1,467 3,152

42,765 87,235 46,970 47,353 315,221

12,962 11,839 188 10,742 54,141

29,803 75,396 46,782 36,611 261,080

7,587 8,849 10,597 8,114 42,261

6,124 6,875 7,269 6,107 29,007

1,463 1,974 3,328 2,007 13,254

New Mexico .............. New York .................. North Carolina ......... North Dakota ........... Ohio ..........................

356,341 2,576,151 816,402 133,045 96,613

10,928 30,128 5,910 542 708

5,995 23,906 14,311 1,979 11,259

96,565 749,216 288,827 28,305 5,836

24,469 137,862 70,985 8,690 1,895

72,096 611,354 217,842 19,615 3,941

9,136 97,802 52,689 6,153 2,321

8,088 58,259 33,575 4,770 2,060

1,048 39,543 19,114 1,383 261

Oklahoma ................. Oregon ...................... Pennsylvania ............ Rhode Island ............ South Carolina .........

513,956 358,983 1,239,720 19,815 109,336

12,080 7,566 4,711 123 72

6,690 3,563 29,897 1,979 6,736

146,522 133,365 340,157 1,077 52,596

37,616 35,099 399 561 47,308

108,906 98,266 339,758 516 5,288

26,921 18,986 79,892 1,621 295

19,849 13,504 54,884 1,487 119

7,072 5,482 25,008 134 176

South Dakota ............ Tennessee .................. Texas ......................... Utah .......................... Vermont ....................

70,648 548,358 2,685,207 247,075 119,159

2,034 2,017 65,581 5,022 677

1,229 706 15,648 4,402 3,952

9,860 234,826 786,763 95,780 35,771

9,246 62,055 187,893 22,241 12,552

614 172,771 598,870 73,539 23,219

1,799 31,669 151,452 13,372 6,697

0 30,817 107,864 11,241 5,278

1,799 852 43,588 2,131 1,419

Virginia ..................... Washington .............. West Virginia ............ Wisconsin ................. Wyoming ..................

679,007 529,234 217,435 620,267 104,070

3,835 6,810 551 5,920 1,220

34,307 9,525 1,633 10,084 1,088

236,654 148,825 56,901 218,580 28,376

61,891 5,057 1,114 62,253 8,176

174,763 143,768 55,787 156,327 20,200

42,189 1,982 12,653 35,138 5,363

29,245 1,822 8,557 26,788 4,427

12,944 160 4,096 8,350 936

District of Columbia . American Samoa ...... Fed. States of Micronesia ....... Guam ........................ Marshall Islands .......

111,899 19,079

813 0

1,246 0

32,917 6,017

14,148 999

18,769 5,018

7,020 262

4,569 0

2,451 262

7,769 33,825 3,156

90 367 273

0 0 0

4,155 15,603 1,030

0 930 0

4,15587 14,673 1,030

0 779 66

87 442 0

337 66

Northern Marianas .. Palau ......................... Puerto Rico ............... Virgin Islands ........... Undistributed ...........

16,399 3,272 483,539 4,680 0

0 187 1,211 0 0

0 0 155 0 0

4,574 1,189 67,643 2,799 0

159 0 0 2,749 0

4,415 1,189 67,643 500 00

489 105 40,157 0 0

0 0 25,954 0 0

See footnotes at end of table

62

The Book of the States 2005

2,107

489 105 14,203


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Education—continued Office of Elementary and Secondary Education

Office of Postsecondary Education Higher education programs

Programs for the disadvantaged

State and outlying area

Total

United States, total ....... $15,949,551

Impact Migrants (b) Others (b) aid (b) $379,769

$618,340 $940,294

No Child Left Behind Act (b) $3,628,503

Title I program

Other (b)

$8,469,238 $1,913,407

Total

Int’l education prog. (b)

$1,217,181 $54,417

Office of Student Financial Other (b) Asstnce. (b) (c) $1,162,764

$898,414

Alabama ...................... Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ Arkansas ..................... California ....................

255,855 117,239 415,121 205,976 2,628,065

2,960 0 7,054 5,350 134,185

13,517 0 13,167 14,251 121,199

3,203 77,815 105,480 785 83,867

67,135 12,826 76,038 64,326 559,533

146,634 0 163,118 102,330 1,413,360

22,406 5,534 50,264 18,934 315,921

42,010 26,598 25,233 17,800 142,938

90 0 1,253 154 7,968

41,920 10,876 23,980 17,646 134,970

16,257 1,717 19,701 10,424 117,218

Colorado ...................... Connecticut ................. Delaware ...................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................

206,057 188,936 53,661 821,522 39,352

7,920 3,252 492 24,451 734

7,705 5,289 2,329 33,620 0

18,878 6,275 60 10,971 19,765

47,823 48,762 15,752 193,714 14,503

95,327 101,534 27,545 473,255 0

28,404 23,824 7,483 85,511 4,350

24,614 6,767 6,344 38,963 15,377

454 548 0 1,964 330

24,160 6,219 6,344 36,999 15,047

17,843 4,045 3,563 30,203 11,627

Hawaii ......................... Idaho ........................... Illinois .......................... Indiana ........................ Iowa .............................

101,169 76,480 716,043 264,931 124,185

1,385 6,076 3,030 4,541 1,672

2,480 2,837 51,152 12,497 7,992

43,671 7,147 11,110 1,163 349

10,261 20,804 183,624 56,701 49,606

26,543 32,189 398,654 159,966 53,661

16,829 7,427 68,473 30,063 10,905

15,708 7,977 48,682 20,239 11,224

1,741 17 2,744 2,829 639

13,967 7,960 45,938 17,410 10,585

3,668 5,319 35,973 17,804 10,723

Kansas ......................... Kentucky ..................... Louisiana ..................... Maine .......................... Maryland .....................

35,430 253,631 19,305 73,766 268,485

1,094 8,823 0 4,162 703

282 7,366 0 2,582 7,535

10,670 701 6,757 462 7,484

19,948 65,736 8,803 22,958 53,729

0 142,466 0 37,762 172,580

3,436 28,539 3,745 5,840 26,454

23,873 29,823 11,026 10,862 31,575

2,152 378 102 336 853

21,721 29,445 10,924 10,526 30,722

10,393 15,625 6,357 11,381 15,940

Massachusetts .............. Michigan ..................... Minnesota .................... Mississippi ................... Missouri .......................

371,500 649,427 31,189 252,111 39,235

1,819 10,072 0 1,791 409

22,640 30,285 0 7,495 0

563 4,158 11,644 3,504 21,358

95,259 141,413 10,968 66,941 16,279

228,114 376,376 0 137,339 0

23,105 87,123 8,577 35,041 1,189

14,711 32,971 14,333 20,233 19,202

33 5,359 835 51 171

14,678 27,612 13,498 20,182 19,031

17,705 34,563 16,745 13,881 15,755

Montana ...................... Nebraska ..................... Nevada ......................... New Hampshire ........... New Jersey ..................

115,757 88,414 88,310 51,587 438,452

1,084 4,934 271 235 1,953

2,070 1,455 2,326 1,736 12,804

35,976 19,261 3,690 0 21,380

29,700 14,971 20,552 13,307 100,797

33,836 37,048 40,137 25,766 272,630

13,091 10,745 21,334 10,543 28,888

9,257 8,075 2,696 3,793 18,270

175 0 0 54 221

9,082 8,075 2,696 3,739 18,049

5,062 5,171 219 6,753 19,918

New Mexico ................. New York ..................... North Carolina ............ North Dakota .............. Ohio .............................

204,653 1,550,427 400,650 83,946 24,845

2,174 10,258 7,145 332 90

5,327 57,371 11,233 1,732 0

50,925 8,131 13,846 27,475 3,893

38,638 290,886 109,739 21,072 17,896

81,734 991,038 206,143 25,022 0

25,855 192,743 52,544 8,313 2,966

19,019 50,793 38,003 6,164 25,697

588 880 2,104 64 2,349

18,431 49,913 35,899 6,100 23,348

10,045 73,879 16,012 5,956 25,947

Oklahoma .................... Oregon ......................... Pennsylvania ............... Rhode Island ............... South Carolina ............

275,764 168,860 727,886 4,381 34,385

2,495 12,251 10,999 0 431

3,570 4,164 42,158 0 338

37,108 3,808 2,194 1,243 3,559

66,405 53,230 160,124 1,768 26,253

117,605 76,309 435,638 0 0

48,581 19,098 76,773 1,370 3,804

32,134 14,523 24,516 6,061 10,703

0 111 2,133 0 493

32,134 14,412 22,383 6,061 10,210

13,845 12,120 32,661 4,573 4,549

South Dakota ............... Tennessee ..................... Texas ............................ Utah ............................. Vermont .......................

45,720 241,899 1,496,740 104,548 56,588

0 979 65,355 1,467 652

0 7,605 42,240 2,835 1,669

39,197 3,049 80,891 10,485 271

2,923 59,364 307,066 34,069 21,690

0 139,287 831,366 41,420 25,144

3,600 31,615 169,822 14,272 7,162

4,510 22,611 105,143 12,004 7,365

147 20 4,209 825 0

4,363 22,591 100,934 11,179 7,365

5,496 14,630 63,880 11,947 8,109

Virginia ........................ Washington ................. West Virginia ............... Wisconsin .................... Wyoming .....................

307,790 316,106 119,240 291,965 61,535

731 15,420 376 657 316

8,483 9,681 4,468 9,500 2,010

41,612 51,997 11 11,626 7,758

48,832 83,002 25,765 81,005 21,535

153,328 123,317 83,030 146,973 23,257

54,804 32,689 5,590 40,204 6,659

35,002 29,113 19,692 29,974 5,096

1,473 3,609 69 3,877 15

33,529 25,504 19,623 26,097 5,081

19,230 16,873 6,765 28,606 1,392

District of Columbia .... American Samoa ......... Fed. States of Micronesia .......... Guam ........................... Marshall Islands ..........

66,011 11,976

318 0

2,185 127

1,329 0

15,758 810

34,596 0

11,825 11,039

2,815 737

0 0

2,815 737

1,077 87

2,889 14,705 1,363

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 61 0

1,389 970 772

0 0 0

1,500 13,674 591

548 1,664 374

0 0 0

548 1,664 374

0 707 50

Northern Marianas ..... Palau ............................ Puerto Rico .................. Virgin Islands .............. Undistributed ..............

9,050 840 333,593 5 0

0 0 6,871 0 0

0 0 15,033 0 0

0 0 1,678 0 0

30 140 34,603 0 0

0 0 235,861 0 0

9,020 700 39,547 5 0

2,231 770 22,810 1,657 0

0 0 0 0 0

2,231 770 22,810 1,657 0

55 181 17,970 219 0

See footnotes at end of table

The Council of State Governments

63


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued

Department of Energy

State and outlying area

Election Assistance Commission

Total

Environ. and other defense programs

Energy Energy research and conservation development programs programs

Other programs

Environmental Protection Agency Hazardous substance Equal response Employment (Superfund) Opportunity Total and L.U.S.T. Other Commission

United States, total ..........

$664,500

$643,648

$84,441

$408,335

$89,140

$61,732

$4,092,280

$208,389

$3,883,891

$30,852

Alabama ......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ........................... Arkansas ........................ California .......................

5,041 5,000 7,016 6,163 84,664

6,222 2,997 8,742 1,966 23,383

0 675 0 0 859

3,915 1,779 6,416 1,808 13,913

2,307 539 2,326 73 8,090

0 4 0 85 521

36,642 77,714 40,334 33,191 251,252

2,766 1,143 3,889 1,938 13,481

33,876 76,571 36,445 31,253 237,771

0 192 427 0 3,075

Colorado ......................... Connecticut .................... Delaware ......................... Florida ............................ Georgia ...........................

7,037 5,000 5,000 26,029 12,557

11,418 12,189 2,753 10,950 12,760

2,095 0 0 1,153 1,356

7,390 10,370 1,403 6,659 7,518

1,933 1,819 1,350 3,058 3,697

0 0 0 80 189

53,637 48,046 17,466 135,156 52,306

9,665 1,662 2,600 4,133 3,210

43,972 46,384 14,866 131,023 49,096

622 636 99 1,275 188

Hawaii ............................ Idaho .............................. Illinois ............................. Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................

5,000 5,000 44,935 15,753 5,000

1,889 5,852 30,161 15,729 9,767

0 2,287 18 0 0

914 2,443 27,046 14,787 7,480

975 761 3,093 942 2,287

0 361 4 0 0

15,951 33,005 192,514 47,011 87,113

1,149 2,761 8,936 4,254 2,667

14,802 30,244 183,578 42,757 84,446

146 346 2,315 524 1,734

Kansas ............................ Kentucky ........................ Louisiana ........................ Maine ............................. Maryland ........................

5,000 5,168 12,263 5,000 7,274

4,761 6,807 2,891 6,262 4,143

0 0 0 146 126

3,611 6,783 2,891 3,721 2,545

1,150 24 0 2,395 499

0 0 0 0 973

41,147 51,568 43,394 46,107 88,295

2,879 1,694 2,274 1,255 4,725

38,268 49,874 41,120 44,852 83,570

315 162 0 257 644

Massachusetts ................. Michigan ........................ Minnesota ....................... Mississippi ...................... Missouri ..........................

8,110 15,739 5,314 5,451 17,348

28,919 33,755 16,367 3,372 11,590

0 1,146 0 0 157

19,647 28,443 16,145 2,228 9,913

1,316 4,166 222 1,144 1,520

7,956 0 0 0 0

145,767 155,034 112,574 47,536 132,036

5,919 7,401 5,023 2,202 5,400

139,848 147,633 107,551 45,334 126,636

1,341 607 1,592 0 693

Montana ......................... Nebraska ........................ Nevada ............................ New Hampshire .............. New Jersey .....................

5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 16,837

3,924 3,790 41,648 2,960 39,251

0 0 11,210 0 27,833

3,081 3,279 863 2,415 10,351

843 511 1,569 545 1,067

0 0 28,006 0 0

54,799 21,353 36,546 39,690 136,898

3,578 1,885 1,403 3,972 9,289

51,221 19,468 35,143 35,718 127,609

237 946 680 107 261

New Mexico .................... New York ........................ North Carolina ............... North Dakota ................. Ohio ................................

5,000 66,098 8,782 5,000 41,053

35,634 32,662 8,263 3,077 29,645

8,584 0 0 0 3,864

4,681 26,359 7,531 2,907 23,825

3,215 6,192 732 170 1,956

19,154 111 0 0 0

60,904 271,078 79,413 44,532 122,664

3,571 10,031 4,099 1,181 5,064

57,333 261,047 75,314 43,351 117,600

286 2,123 138 149 1,809

Oklahoma ....................... Oregon ............................ Pennsylvania .................. Rhode Island .................. South Carolina ...............

5,000 6,027 34,240 5,000 6,820

3,892 8,039 37,502 2,038 8,733

0 1,617 0 0 4,209

3,557 3,721 32,194 1,988 3,869

335 2,701 4,898 50 507

0 0 410 0 148

58,150 56,579 154,340 40,132 43,756

1,794 6,627 1,788 2,142 3,134

56,356 49,952 152,552 37,990 40,622

403 596 1,510 110 597

South Dakota .................. Tennessee ........................ Texas ............................... Utah ................................ Vermont ..........................

5,000 8,478 23,476 8,818 5,000

3,126 12,265 18,589 7,290 2,118

0 736 2,028 0 0

2,092 8,456 13,703 4,640 1,482

1,034 585 2,018 2,650 636

0 2,488 840 0 0

36,988 48,754 211,366 32,615 26,224

1,026 3,145 5,949 3,364 1,293

35,962 45,609 205,417 29,251 24,931

205 355 624 306 65

Virginia ........................... Washington .................... West Virginia .................. Wisconsin ....................... Wyoming ........................

11,632 12,898 5,327 7,003 5,000

8,399 25,699 4,701 10,942 1,764

557 13,333 0 0 0

5,381 8,791 4,668 9,010 1,564

2,461 3,568 33 1,932 200

0 7 0 0 0

88,864 105,237 63,081 135,578 30,304

9,305 6,287 2,010 7,537 395

79,559 98,950 61,071 128,041 29,909

213 688 130 728 72

District of Columbia ....... American Samoa ............ Fed. States of Micronesia ............. Guam .............................. Marshall Islands .............

5,000 1,000

9,863 353

452 0

6,040 279

2,976 74

395 0

78,736 0

5,161 0

73,575 0

37 0

0 1,000 0

0 56 0

0 0 0

0 56 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 3,804 0

0 120 0

0 3,684 0

0 0 0

Northern Marianas ........ Palau ............................... Puerto Rico ..................... Virgin Islands ................. Undistributed .................

0 0 3,151 1,000 15,000

220 17 792 751 0

0 0 0 0 0

220 17 801 746 0

0 0 -9 5 0

0 0 0 0 0

1,729 0 16,780 6,589 1

45 0 154 1 13

1,684 0 16,626 6,588 -12

0 0 287 0 0

See footnotes at end of table

64

The Book of the States 2005


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Health and Human Services Administration for Children and Families

State and outlying area

Total

Total

Child care and develop.

Child support enforce.

Children and Family Safe and Services Stable (Head Start) Families

United States, total . $221,042,178 $45,911,674 $5,166,233 $2,915,081 $8,121,028

$336,265

Foster care and Refugee adoption and entrant assistance assistance $6,117,576 $443,999

Social Services Block Grant

Temporary Assistance to Needy Families (TANF)

Other

$1,740,149 $19,136,671 $19,342,672

Alabama ................ Alaska .................... Arizona .................. Arkansas ............... California ..............

3,331,648 833,093 4,230,467 2,253,911 26,779,816

469,888 180,255 782,309 249,933 7,953,714

66,841 17,143 124,281 42,347 498,856

36,117 8,388 31,618 27,360 547,642

131,349 55,075 171,162 85,316 987,676

9,353 1,489 9,223 2,590 37,737

34,070 15,276 70,564 36,604 1,420,813

439 73 8,847 61 58,927

27,439 2,826 31,524 17,142 181,761

149,294 71,046 324,081 26,707 4,131,074

14,986 8,939 11,009 11,806 89,228

Colorado ................ Connecticut ........... Delaware ................ Florida ................... Georgia ..................

2,121,628 2,548,564 530,437 9,968,790 5,652,054

533,981 513,834 95,443 1,816,472 945,720

59,687 50,857 13,725 260,859 194,073

41,085 27,025 13,196 135,489 67,060

132,113 65,761 16,341 320,047 211,768

3,119 1,519 923 19,647 12,894

77,668 48,113 11,033 152,584 70,300

7,618 1,825 75 86,401 7,420

25,465 15,540 4,283 98,700 45,623

155,760 260,192 29,672 717,748 319,992

31,466 43,002 6,195 24,997 16,590

Hawaii ................... Idaho ..................... Illinois .................... Indiana .................. Iowa .......................

729,885 826,243 7,399,570 3,708,537 1,912,417

171,029 142,248 1,758,529 645,891 344,632

17,515 21,317 205,123 120,584 33,839

2,595 11,177 107,909 18,768 16,259

36,188 39,782 331,550 119,585 69,905

2,645 1,404 7,284 7,350 2,602

25,265 9,575 406,413 74,443 45,126

485 2,789 12,969 378 5,034

7,268 6,792 82,927 38,802 17,389

77,399 37,782 505,583 215,415 124,687

1,669 11,630 98,771 50,566 29,791

Kansas ................... Kentucky ............... Louisiana ............... Maine .................... Maryland ...............

1,576,703 3,553,203 4,221,648 1,519,069 3,496,805

321,228 562,057 700,192 206,349 731,176

43,088 98,680 105,581 17,522 94,527

23,508 25,145 23,400 218 65,938

83,187 145,252 166,098 41,027 99,668

2,775 5,830 8,972 1,384 5,534

37,858 78,589 66,863 39,030 158,272

686 4,274 1,145 1,276 4,271

13,925 24,940 27,060 5,088 43,439

97,447 152,586 283,245 76,653 228,617

18,754 26,761 17,828 24,151 30,910

Massachusetts ........ Michigan ............... Minnesota .............. Mississippi ............. Missouri .................

5,578,773 6,993,521 3,567,118 3,021,289 4,520,997

1,051,756 1,859,967 845,499 442,081 673,524

124,446 227,729 77,697 57,690 93,861

41,335 196,696 87,913 12,675 47,251

150,656 292,234 111,523 186,630 152,386

4,461 13,449 4,649 5,337 6,531

115,981 240,913 96,695 15,437 82,713

13,309 12,845 11,402 1,900 6,071

41,460 79,742 31,592 19,379 33,217

483,754 685,252 355,192 131,250 212,377

76,354 111,107 68,836 11,783 39,117

Montana ................ Nebraska ............... Nevada ................... New Hampshire ..... New Jersey ............

675,453 1,159,802 877,958 714,943 5,710,568

156,834 208,527 184,303 131,106 1,166,146

16,131 26,207 23,489 22,306 133,844

5,313 21,844 25,235 7,446 94,282

44,356 49,143 35,611 20,931 160,444

1,302 1,859 1,489 646 9,080

18,348 27,080 23,086 17,450 83,524

169 2,622 272 528 4,716

6,722 10,589 12,125 7,653 52,220

51,620 52,769 57,113 41,112 543,657

12,873 16,414 5,883 13,034 84,379

New Mexico ........... New York ............... North Carolina ...... North Dakota ........ Ohio .......................

2,003,773 27,695,268 6,053,836 491,060 8,872,309

298,062 5,857,489 951,002 113,324 1,997,140

34,689 487,633 177,742 12,277 155,441

15,380 129,222 65,895 5,531 195,257

80,834 517,369 203,157 34,689 304,139

3,880 562 9,806 1,094 10,449

26,191 756,784 71,210 14,158 377,952

2,039 61,676 5,362 1,782 5,743

16,350 121,328 51,644 3,803 50,740

104,434 3,490,958 331,439 26,275 804,919

14,265 291,957 34,747 13,715 192,500

Oklahoma .............. Oregon ................... Pennsylvania ......... Rhode Island ......... South Carolina ......

2,501,992 2,430,821 10,046,226 1,146,580 3,227,785

541,796 516,982 2,070,903 200,223 398,933

92,459 71,568 186,835 18,125 77,603

30,521 29,455 125,224 3,655 19,722

124,238 107,592 281,809 32,760 106,072

6,539 7,128 8,659 1,990 8,802

53,391 59,327 394,359 20,582 42,721

1,132 6,397 11,945 692 218

20,554 39,326 88,155 5,144 22,961

199,325 173,941 837,387 104,311 108,580

13,637 22,248 136,530 12,964 12,254

South Dakota ......... Tennessee ............... Texas ...................... Utah ....................... Vermont .................

557,312 5,256,045 13,197,720 1,192,830 654,918

114,795 617,081 2,224,039 262,689 126,705

18,080 124,092 371,038 33,861 10,279

4,849 35,527 173,450 15,375 7,286

42,849 144,108 613,763 56,333 24,253

1,361 9,108 39,338 1,864 676

8,526 40,078 208,737 26,611 18,525

1,256 2,357 23,239 2,954 793

3,643 32,571 116,522 11,222 3,921

22,110 208,611 630,524 102,559 50,107

12,121 20,629 47,428 11,910 10,865

Virginia .................. Washington ........... West Virginia ......... Wisconsin .............. Wyoming ...............

2,957,129 4,124,268 1,919,417 4,071,998 328,327

721,814 970,445 314,786 880,967 79,565

88,058 112,308 31,453 89,792 8,801

49,402 68,462 19,559 91,861 5,657

187,492 164,951 67,183 127,063 23,860

11,002 6,719 2,762 3,983 466

106,687 86,829 37,615 95,616 3,413

10,339 16,571 0 8,395 0

43,065 36,466 11,941 32,065 3,457

188,475 440,257 128,280 363,760 29,393

37,294 37,882 15,993 68,432 4,518

Dist. of Columbia ... American Samoa ... Fed. States of Micronesia .... Guam ..................... Marshall Islands ....

1,456,064 14,904

439,509 6,963

67,951 2,443

31,321 0

98,546 4,215

5,763 158

68,578 0

22,282 0

12,058 37

121,713 0

11,297 110

1,231 28,941 275

0 11,686 0

0 1,450 0

0 1,215 0

0 4,294 0

0 575 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 241 0

0 3,842 0

0 69 0

Northern Marianas Palau ...................... Puerto Rico ............ Virgin Islands ........ Undistributed ........

6,214 45 735,443 43,162 11,376

767 0 323,455 21,332 4,599

0 0 0 2,410 0

0 0 17,746 3,622 0

483 0 239,700 11,913 4,599

37 0 112 355 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 303 0

0 0 63,750 2,645 0

247 0 2,147 84 0

See footnotes at end of table

The Council of State Governments

65


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Health and Human Services

State and outlying area

Administration on Aging

Agency for Centers for Healthcare Disease Research and Control Quality (b) and Prevention

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services

Health Resources and Services Administration

Indian Health Service (c)

Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration

United States, total ..........

$1,284,698

$14,641

$720,071

$164,297,410

$5,930,432

$95,858

$2,787,394

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

18,884 10,494 24,277 14,465 126,744

132 0 0 0 2,835

11,672 5,027 7,304 8,271 57,208

2,681,561 534,631 3,258,165 1,903,462 17,643,061

112,868 63,127 91,440 60,007 610,642

0 8,569 17,883 0 6,892

36,643 30,990 49,089 17,773 378,720

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

14,285 14,292 5,568 97,350 24,960

28 0 0 911 0

11,988 8,062 2,017 25,606 38,351

1,417,466 1,907,911 401,225 7,475,492 4,401,467

102,945 69,823 18,003 392,389 176,311

270 0 0 0 0

40,665 34,642 8,181 160,570 65,245

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

8,221 6,465 52,640 24,004 16,599

274 0 0 23 46

4,445 4,919 24,723 15,951 7,241

495,175 634,802 5,216,407 2,922,931 1,472,955

38,772 26,327 239,593 60,637 47,812

0 858 134 0 280

11,969 10,624 107,544 39,100 22,852

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

12,702 16,790 17,121 6,888 27,609

0 190 190 0 202

7,398 5,892 16,492 6,442 13,962

1,184,205 2,857,157 3,344,370 1,258,622 2,559,913

33,713 77,052 105,738 25,390 109,569

53 0 0 0 0

17,404 34,065 37,545 15,378 54,374

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

26,867 43,207 20,849 11,741 26,695

0 339 389 190 0

20,902 23,781 10,755 7,524 13,592

4,221,558 4,849,805 2,589,073 2,442,863 3,644,753

178,347 136,138 59,785 91,812 116,198

70 2,217 2,884 0 0

79,273 78,067 37,884 25,078 46,235

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

7,872 8,618 9,592 6,805 50,494

328 0 0 0 216

2,005 5,292 5,974 4,679 15,034

458,681 892,075 628,519 541,949 4,228,347

32,986 33,028 31,299 17,823 180,960

4,852 1,716 2,704 0 0

11,895 10,546 15,567 12,581 69,371

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

8,260 87,391 31,642 6,981 50,047

210 348 760 0 0

5,846 71,388 20,317 2,822 20,068

1,598,988 20,831,046 4,823,510 343,289 6,550,682

68,101 611,709 133,409 14,153 149,689

5,434 37 678 2,584 0

18,872 235,860 92,518 7,907 104,683

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

20,971 12,843 57,360 6,192 15,313

0 377 388 0 2,354

9,489 7,378 21,820 3,634 9,523

1,827,667 1,807,986 7,560,738 894,173 2,667,490

47,053 54,843 232,074 27,927 101,279

22,608 1,517 0 0 0

32,408 28,895 102,943 14,431 32,893

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

7,973 20,680 67,023 5,813 6,809

0 511 650 325 116

3,101 13,601 46,550 7,644 3,068

390,930 4,450,074 10,306,039 853,464 495,358

22,854 104,590 350,404 36,593 16,126

5,253 2,975 263 95 0

12,406 46,533 202,752 26,207 6,736

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

26,546 24,432 10,920 24,511 5,191

524 978 0 286 0

11,888 12,299 4,522 10,465 2,679

2,019,799 2,953,312 1,510,311 3,032,341 222,709

102,922 107,052 66,032 76,730 7,650

0 1,998 0 2,285 749

73,636 53,752 12,846 44,413 9,784

District of Columbia ........ American Samoa .............. Fed. States of Micronesia .............. Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ..............

11,045 1,318

0 0

27,083 285

832,684 4,416

113,201 1,336

0 0

32,542 586

0 2,738 0

0 0 0

1,231 1,115 275

0 9,679 0

0 1,726 0

0 0 0

0 1,997 0

Northern Marianas ......... Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ....................... Virgin Islands ................... Undistributed ...................

875 0 15,866 2,860 0

0 0 522 0 0

319 45 6,667 1,228 1,212

2,806 0 230,842 8,476 0

811 0 129,311 8,090 4,233

0 0 0 0 0

636 0 28,780 1,176 1,332

See footnotes at end of table

66

The Book of the States 2005


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued

Department of Housing and Urban Development

Department of Homeland Security Federal Emergency Management Agency

State and outlying area

Total (c)

Coast Guard

Total

Disaster relief

$69,310 $4,609,101 $4,205,706

Emergency management planning and assistance $243,113

Other

Total

$160,282 $39,379,286

Fair housing and equal opportunity $49,045

Comm. planning and development Empwermt. Comm. zones Emergency Dev. and other shelter and Block economic homeless Grant devlpmnt. assistance

United States, total .....

$4,763,411

Alabama .................... Alaska ........................ Arizona ...................... Arkansas ................... California ..................

51,592 5,280 11,356 36,382 532,642

1,182 65 646 882 3,122

50,410 5,215 10,710 35,500 529,520

19,334 3,817 6,239 20,555 517,735

30,912 1,393 4,459 14,805 11,785

164 5 12 140 0

512,065 211,612 498,986 260,491 4,467,112

592 0 947 50 4,003

$5,574,695 $108,767 72,430 19,415 79,380 35,117 582,064

982 407 370 426 6,405

$1,121,624 10,904 3,662 24,819 4,210 171,888

Colorado .................... Connecticut ............... Delaware .................... Florida ....................... Georgia ......................

15,862 9,854 4,087 168,027 24,763

421 590 400 3,959 1,748

15,441 9,264 3,687 164,068 23,015

10,077 6,751 2,643 157,477 18,395

5,187 2,513 986 6,316 4,479

177 0 58 275 141

475,679 665,334 104,536 1,441,227 915,556

1,116 684 365 3,215 843

51,036 51,785 10,092 207,752 118,918

95 4,147 0 5,602 301

13,276 14,785 4,520 54,369 19,378

Hawaii ....................... Idaho ......................... Illinois ........................ Indiana ...................... Iowa ...........................

4,288 2,485 937 15,359 12,406

1,062 789 934 639 149

3,226 1,696 3 14,720 12,257

1,702 139 0 5,152 8,985

1,524 1,557 3 9,474 3,209

0 0 0 94 63

182,860 88,251 2,009,285 571,940 242,740

247 263 1,473 902 1,096

27,048 17,854 199,483 87,820 50,734

31 47 2,506 6,769 367

5,211 2,550 60,142 13,465 7,741

Kansas ....................... Kentucky ................... Louisiana ................... Maine ........................ Maryland ...................

14,989 34,290 154,509 5,390 22,090

657 452 1,051 792 1,917

14,332 33,838 153,458 4,598 20,173

12,237 27,467 149,883 2,876 15,406

2,005 6,307 3,377 1,717 4,686

90 64 198 5 81

219,805 485,183 572,440 205,343 772,013

611 1,045 492 230 818

47,548 66,729 91,370 24,577 80,274

95 963 581 687 7

4,352 11,957 21,824 7,136 27,234

Massachusetts ............ Michigan ................... Minnesota .................. Mississippi ................. Missouri .....................

27,522 12,490 36,602 25,728 36,976

759 2,983 1,673 1,269 1,501

26,763 9,507 34,929 24,459 35,475

23,280 5,329 32,213 22,248 32,162

3,457 3,984 2,571 2,060 2,988

26 194 145 151 325

1,807,016 952,128 620,670 308,381 719,494

1,947 939 611 129 1,045

152,666 157,697 79,061 60,801 116,775

3,120 143 3,968 418 10,003

52,445 44,484 21,094 3,633 18,845

Montana .................... Nebraska ................... Nevada ....................... New Hampshire ......... New Jersey ................

3,323 7,280 2,629 7,347 39,568

323 301 652 1,097 2,502

3,000 6,979 1,977 6,250 37,066

1,471 4,782 399 4,253 32,683

1,523 2,197 1,523 1,903 4,259

6 0 55 94 124

109,520 161,077 184,811 165,785 1,502,409

167 824 90 0 336

15,057 31,287 21,981 15,235 131,842

1,425 787 324 56 4,538

1,838 4,574 4,530 4,476 27,508

New Mexico ............... New York ................... North Carolina .......... North Dakota ............ Ohio ...........................

10,706 2,444,369 116,909 15,428 33,412

466 1,177 1,219 370 2,514

10,240 2,443,192 115,690 15,058 30,898

8,558 2,437,550 107,902 13,470 24,415

1,605 3,822 5,555 1,583 6,219

77 1,820 2,233 5 264

191,514 5,391,938 791,806 88,810 1,551,609

168 2,531 1,602 236 2,425

38,685 1,155,238 81,661 12,368 226,714

1,184 2,443 1,651 121 11,725

6,140 123,995 11,642 593 52,747

Oklahoma .................. Oregon ....................... Pennsylvania ............. Rhode Island ............. South Carolina ..........

34,748 30,724 23,683 4,740 10,571

992 1,166 1,399 488 1,486

33,756 29,558 22,284 4,252 9,085

30,467 16,106 16,810 1,978 6,438

3,044 13,452 5,467 2,234 2,481

245 0 7 40 166

462,906 351,121 1,803,317 294,865 367,733

196 236 1,833 234 273

50,897 39,623 267,662 27,516 50,684

688 626 10,559 1,025 4,485

5,469 10,360 59,290 6,052 6,628

South Dakota ............. Tennessee ................... Texas .......................... Utah ........................... Vermont .....................

6,818 13,746 229,982 7,298 2,970

587 1,167 1,989 0 463

6,231 12,579 227,993 7,298 2,507

4,850 10,524 214,076 233 1,816

1,307 1,984 13,917 7,009 681

74 71 0 56 10

124,224 613,716 1,821,049 132,470 103,628

0 1,475 3,375 406 289

23,764 59,405 305,653 25,116 17,036

1,256 1,781 3,741 31 34

1,050 12,844 50,324 5,241 2,054

Virginia ...................... Washington ............... West Virginia ............. Wisconsin .................. Wyoming ...................

17,013 31,268 21,230 14,456 6,122

1,024 1,111 308 1,857 188

15,989 30,157 20,922 12,599 5,934

9,816 24,001 18,300 9,076 4,210

6,089 6,156 2,586 3,213 1,633

84 0 36 310 91

682,555 687,213 221,639 507,761 39,625

2,352 1,316 481 488 83

77,962 66,277 50,416 98,013 5,320

5,036 2,727 3,759 242 27

16,413 34,415 3,086 17,311 328

District of Columbia .. American Samoa ....... Fed. States of Micronesia ........ Guam ......................... Marshall Islands ........

3,843 309

610 309

3,233 0

2,198 0

1,035 0

0 0

738,534 789

3,966 0

56,768 605

0 0

18,238 0

6,295 27,817 0

0 206 0

6,295 27,611 0

6,295 27,059 0

0 552 0

0 0 0

0 37,394 0

0 0 0

0 3,066 0

0 0 0

0 376 0

Northern Marianas ... Palau .......................... Puerto Rico ................ Virgin Islands ............ Undistributed ............

2,291 0 140,444 9,816 170,350

66 0 410 483 12,738

2,225 0 55,034 9,333 157,612

1,585 0 53,598 8,604 81

640 0 1,436 729 5,525

0 0 0 0 152,006

1,761 0 653,857 50,613 233,090

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 127,640 2,778 0

0 0 56 0 0

9 0 9,801 367 1

See footnotes at end of table

The Council of State Governments

67


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Housing and Urban Development—Continued Housing programs Public housing programs

State and outlying area

College housing

Housing opportunities for persons with AIDS

Native American block grant

Housing for special populations

Low rent housing Neighborhood assistance revitalization

Drug elimination

Housing certificate program

Capital programs

United States, total ..........

$9,433

$253,581

$722,691

$991,556

$3,461,203

$554,598

$221,950

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

201 0 106 0 356

1,696 446 2,102 74 35,190

2,564 129,879 148,238 0 42,250

8,970 5,599 10,801 12,388 119,690

112,214 7,607 14,892 25,492 113,702

4,322 0 9,400 10 42,359

6,615 1,524 5,383 1,382 7,571

191,098 34,389 173,948 143,523 3,017,157

82,040 4,899 10,174 27,915 115,430

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

310 60 0 48 0

2,015 3,789 1,204 35,163 7,063

2,578 474 0 2,420 -175

9,877 15,818 2,964 44,817 10,944

13,839 54,831 9,243 95,237 112,150

4,747 5,510 3,492 37,672 23,583

1,417 3,216 1,136 9,637 7,156

342,308 439,923 57,235 808,224 479,474

13,077 47,164 8,227 80,720 99,574

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

327 136 429 162 0

1,314 276 5,664 1,545 301

0 4,949 859 0 225

6,026 2,321 60,784 8,797 5,860

10,711 1,076 252,635 39,890 4,805

135 0 25,456 2,692 0

1,900 50 8,185 3,393 475

97,994 51,507 1,050,295 339,362 140,273

28,686 1,125 249,830 34,661 11,031

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

6 23 0 0 0

47 1,752 4,675 857 6,670

2,008 0 288 5,705 418

5,881 12,010 21,521 7,405 33,684

13,744 45,812 63,176 8,406 73,774

135 8,008 9,057 0 25,961

1,358 2,077 4,070 165 5,393

113,037 252,306 252,726 132,087 433,933

17,813 59,508 84,803 9,229 49,987

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

844 481 629 0 0

6,153 2,732 1,317 1,570 3,113

366 11,722 15,675 1,216 198

43,640 31,656 22,923 6,595 29,753

99,724 47,281 38,264 27,258 39,449

11,595 2,194 64 4,080 9,975

6,897 2,141 2,865 2,159 3,073

1,289,001 534,394 363,474 154,683 323,000

88,177 53,346 45,730 29,698 132,102

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

0 0 0 0 1,467

412 0 944 443 13,053

26,670 4,609 9,392 0 0

4,487 5,526 5,404 4,724 36,226

3,755 10,242 16,140 6,135 154,815

0 0 0 0 47,619

1,141 890 741 851 7,089

45,020 79,588 110,785 123,885 913,002

4,488 13,063 7,373 6,927 127,289

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

0 636 285 267 84

777 54,492 2,692 0 2,075

13,448 4,552 13,890 18,275 0

10,703 98,501 19,271 2,521 43,939

9,231 819,283 96,015 2,720 156,540

0 18,661 35,680 0 28,215

930 37,954 5,281 647 10,499

89,715 2,274,264 410,916 44,172 816,104

10,580 521,449 77,855 2,137 128,942

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

25 0 176 240 77

858 1,397 6,523 1,138 2,039

128,269 7,941 12 702 1,501

6,097 14,795 42,065 12,051 11,254

23,974 14,933 243,848 20,697 30,712

15,176 7,571 53,528 0 7,867

3,359 1,321 9,975 1,396 2,605

188,156 220,830 818,495 191,481 205,632

22,757 13,837 224,866 20,214 28,584

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

0 487 925 187 194

0 1,958 13,637 503 468

33,842 0 1,479 3,493 0

1,548 18,597 29,659 3,195 6,731

2,464 91,556 112,855 3,826 2,824

0 28,876 22,589 0 0

1,287 6,099 6,825 389 163

53,368 282,022 1,047,890 78,171 65,680

2,306 80,601 136,611 3,973 2,937

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

37 115 0 98 15

1,443 4,640 370 1,405 0

220 54,340 0 19,926 5,027

18,409 14,696 3,713 17,948 822

62,319 34,773 15,454 16,556 1,175

14,406 25,159 3,598 2,269 0

4,003 3,447 978 1,509 115

401,635 367,384 116,361 277,709 23,224

38,874 48,891 12,974 23,176 941

District of Columbia ........ American Samoa .............. Fed. States of Micronesia .............. Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ..............

0 0

8,535 0

3,246 0

10,551 0

-91,384 0

19,652 0

3,545 0

185,602 0

500,559 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 3,150 0

0 0 0

0 45 0

0 28,318 0

0 1,827 0

Northern Marianas ......... Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ....................... Virgin Islands ................... Undistributed ...................

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 7,051 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 6,621 778 0

0 0 95,338 20,654 155,391

0 0 -7,078 363 0

0 0 19,627 0 1

1,752 0 256,281 16,288 547

0 0 118,574 8,673 77,661

See footnotes at end of table

68

The Book of the States 2005

$20,949,628 $3,653,885


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Housing and Urban Development— Continued

State and outlying area

Housing programs— Con’t Home ownership assistance Other

Department of the Interior

Institute for Museum and Library Services

Total

Bureau of Indian Affairs

Bureau of Land Management Payments in lieu Shared Total of taxes revenues

Bureau of Reclamation

United States, total ..........

$1,617,774

$88,856

$234,166

$3,746,651

$820,953

$402,101

$218,173

$183,928

$265,952

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

16,914 3,680 17,058 9,904 201,960

523 105 1,368 0 7,087

4,083 1,599 3,847 1,626 22,756

30,943 193,865 222,798 19,485 213,331

3,007 101,843 152,671 0 46,595

389 49,773 18,304 2,834 19,529

389 15,196 18,045 2,834 19,246

0 34,577 259 0 283

0 0 38,350 0 76,834

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

19,385 17,294 5,190 56,351 35,621

603 5,854 868 0 726

3,356 2,512 781 11,535 4,500

115,892 6,077 5,065 28,891 16,671

5,353 831 0 8,188 0

17,910 29 3 2,754 1,495

17,646 29 3 2,754 1,495

264 0 0 0 0

21,792 0 5 0 0

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

3,230 6,097 85,072 32,482 18,530

0 0 6,472 0 1,302

1,838 1,436 11,743 3,304 5,280

8,748 40,941 24,759 21,134 10,502

1 11,243 0 0 71

21 15,254 609 361 247

21 15,017 609 361 247

0 237 0 0 0

193 892 3 0 287

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

13,081 22,339 17,857 7,840 27,837

89 654 0 1,019 6,023

1,621 2,444 3,167 1,969 3,406

19,085 41,201 44,308 17,495 11,337

2,879 0 2,847 10,724 1,110

618 1,524 312 197 92

618 1,524 312 197 92

0 0 0 0 0

891 0 0 0 0

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

43,260 61,354 22,767 15,609 29,307

7,181 1,564 2,228 532 2,856

8,208 6,006 3,722 2,360 6,200

8,370 42,909 49,915 16,464 17,980

1,984 20,702 28,632 5,131 679

67 2,350 1,531 859 2,134

67 2,350 1,531 859 2,134

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

4,804 8,960 7,107 3,021 35,866

256 727 0 32 1,759

1,132 1,381 2,230 1,480 6,986

119,675 18,553 82,441 7,163 8,356

46,607 7,486 14,775 0 0

17,612 640 47,971 970 66

16,874 639 13,133 970 66

738 1 34,838 0 0

7,366 928 3,159 0 0

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

9,953 272,207 30,524 4,753 61,999

0 5,732 2,841 0 9,601

1,855 18,283 5,782 984 9,846

402,347 28,155 25,805 66,830 26,860

60,952 3,320 13,126 31,601 0

22,198 87 2,348 974 523

21,398 87 2,348 967 523

800 0 0 7 0

9,035 46 0 18,047 0

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

16,968 17,266 63,868 10,296 13,938

17 385 617 1,823 1,454

3,251 3,054 12,907 848 3,075

70,508 143,873 52,544 7,388 9,006

51,668 10,933 0 2,008 289

1,488 116,779 347 0 241

1,487 6,010 347 0 241

1 110,769 0 0 0

589 2,029 0 0 0

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

3,339 25,843 84,901 7,939 3,722

0 2,172 585 0 1,496

703 3,751 14,114 2,014 742

130,474 19,269 57,318 117,291 5,825

58,883 389 3,161 3,134 0

2,577 1,371 2,586 18,845 496

2,501 1,371 2,586 18,657 496

76 0 0 188 0

60,872 0 1,624 20,206 0

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

35,280 28,741 9,129 28,765 2,548

4,166 292 1,320 2,346 0

4,535 4,320 1,229 3,861 803

26,592 114,099 44,932 43,732 519,242

492 88,635 0 24,689 2,011

2,297 5,128 1,620 484 15,172

2,297 5,104 1,620 484 14,306

0 24 0 0 866

0 1,818 0 0 986

District of Columbia ........ American Samoa .............. Fed. States of Micronesia .............. Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ..............

15,075 184

4,181 0

3,030 147

-3,972 35,040

-7,697 0

18 0

18 0

0 0

0 0

0 612 0

0 0 0

0 114 56

104,018 37,899 53,652

0 0 0

0 2 0

0 2 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

Northern Marianas ......... Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ....................... Virgin Islands ................... Undistributed ...................

0 0 19,946 712 -511

0 0 0 0 0

151 0 2,107 96 0

21,017 42,835 4,425 69,661 5,632

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 26 39 0

0 0 26 39 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

See footnotes at end of table

The Council of State Governments

69


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of the Interior—Con’t Fish & Wildlife Service State and outlying area

Total

Minerals Management Service

National Park Service

Wildlife conservation and restoration

Sport fish restoration

Other

Total

Minerals Leasing Act

Other

Total

Historic preservation

Other

United States, total ......

$576,583

$293,527

$272,617

$10,439

$1,019,981

$947,006

$72,975

$93,541

$41,428

$52,113

Alabama ...................... Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ Arkansas ...................... California ....................

8,011 24,840 11,478 10,172 39,845

4,224 11,462 6,043 4,382 21,356

3,583 13,338 5,435 5,730 17,451

204 40 0 60 1,038

13,731 12,764 121 4,109 25,463

262 9,011 121 2,216 21,773

13,469 3,753 0 1,893 3,690

1,799 940 1,874 854 4,945

738 745 804 500 1,492

1,061 195 1,070 354 3,453

Colorado ...................... Connecticut ................. Delaware ...................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................

10,441 4,304 4,226 15,444 12,648

4,457 1,489 998 8,263 7,879

5,959 2,605 3,136 5,751 4,769

25 210 92 1,430 0

53,947 0 0 370 0

53,768 0 0 369 0

179 0 0 1 0

1,346 913 831 2,135 2,528

713 470 555 818 671

633 443 276 1,317 1,857

Hawaii .......................... Idaho ............................ Illinois .......................... Indiana ......................... Iowa .............................

5,764 10,081 10,727 10,580 5,954

3,222 4,507 4,980 4,505 3,321

2,542 5,217 5,637 5,946 2,633

0 357 110 129 0

0 1,793 109 6 0

0 1,788 0 6 0

0 5 109 0 0

1,148 1,678 2,186 2,422 2,259

503 795 738 859 875

645 883 1,448 1,563 1,384

Kansas ......................... Kentucky ..................... Louisiana ..................... Maine ........................... Maryland .....................

9,058 8,657 7,938 5,443 5,295

4,325 3,880 4,057 2,793 2,597

4,701 4,655 3,851 2,289 2,157

32 122 30 361 541

1,823 50 30,746 0 0

1,821 0 939 0 0

2 50 29,807 0 0

1,643 1,524 2,229 1,131 973

728 618 553 548 973

915 906 1,676 583 0

Massachusetts ............. Michigan ...................... Minnesota .................... Mississippi ................... Missouri .......................

3,928 17,723 16,349 8,626 11,310

860 9,178 6,145 4,369 5,851

2,253 8,533 10,204 3,901 5,180

815 12 0 356 279

0 431 17 1,156 332

0 375 5 70 0

0 56 12 1,086 332

2,391 1,703 3,386 556 2,081

890 633 915 556 1,134

1,501 1,070 2,471 0 947

Montana ...................... Nebraska ...................... Nevada ......................... New Hampshire .......... New Jersey ...................

16,827 7,696 9,556 4,890 6,692

10,499 4,096 4,683 2,398 3,185

6,328 3,600 4,873 2,431 2,567

0 0 0 61 940

25,536 13 5,055 0 0

25,517 13 5,046 0 0

19 0 9 0 0

930 1,790 1,925 1,303 1,598

427 585 812 666 1,317

503 1,205 1,113 637 281

New Mexico ................. New York ..................... North Carolina ............ North Dakota .............. Ohio .............................

8,323 20,075 9,052 6,877 12,822

3,808 10,010 5,205 3,652 5,704

4,515 9,951 3,763 3,213 7,002

0 114 84 12 116

297,905 0 0 4,944 281

297,740 0 0 4,929 1

165 0 0 15 280

1,457 4,627 1,279 1,900 3,048

585 1,128 823 650 1,001

872 3,499 456 1,250 2,047

Oklahoma .................... Oregon ......................... Pennsylvania ............... Rhode Island ............... South Carolina ............

10,222 12,116 17,593 4,180 7,437

5,209 4,680 7,319 1,306 4,082

4,920 5,984 10,244 2,834 3,091

93 1,452 30 40 264

2,371 33 20 0 0

2,137 32 0 0 0

234 1 20 0 0

1,381 1,983 878 1,200 1,039

727 699 613 673 690

654 1,284 265 527 349

South Dakota ............... Tennessee ..................... Texas ............................ Utah ............................. Vermont .......................

6,980 16,641 25,421 19,063 4,410

3,176 9,433 13,340 14,590 1,448

3,804 6,959 12,053 4,470 2,704

0 249 28 3 258

393 0 17,077 50,614 0

392 0 442 50,547 0

1 0 16,635 67 0

769 382 3,696 1,706 919

473 366 912 903 436

296 16 2,784 803 483

Virginia ........................ Washington .................. West Virginia ............... Wisconsin .................... Wyoming .....................

10,208 15,953 8,394 16,827 7,684

6,431 10,798 4,326 8,845 4,808

3,677 4,837 4,068 7,951 2,876

100 318 0 31 0

0 1,089 414 0 467,266

0 1,079 0 0 466,606

0 10 414 0 660

4,174 1,476 1,782 1,732 1,548

1,797 1,023 1,256 691 700

2,377 453 526 1,041 848

District of Columbia ... American Samoa ......... Fed. States of Micronesia .......... Guam ........................... Marshall Islands .........

3,133 995

2,212 424

921 571

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 0

574 106

417 106

157 0

0 1,272 0

0 668 0

0 604 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

172 345 0

172 345 0

0 0 0

Northern Marianas ..... Palau ............................ Puerto Rico .................. Virgin Islands .............. Undistributed ..............

1,521 0 3,348 1,533 0

717 0 962 370 0

804 0 2,386 1,160 0

0 0 0 3 0

0 0 0 0 2

0 0 0 0 1

0 0 0 0 1

361 215 1,051 263 457

358 215 318 263 457

3 0 733 0 0

See footnotes at end of table

70

The Book of the States 2005


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of the Interior—Con’t Office of Surface Mining, Reclamation and Enforcement State and outlying area

Department of Justice

Total

Abandoned mine reclamation

Other

Office of Insular Affairs

Total

Federal Prison System

Office of Asset Forfeiture

United States, total ......

$202,448

$146,341

$56,107

$365,092

$4,170,559

$6,359

$210,518

Alabama ...................... Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ Arkansas ...................... California ....................

4,006 3,705 0 1,516 0

2,930 3,543 0 1,388 0

1,076 162 0 128 0

0 0 0 0 120

55,095 27,442 78,482 32,529 496,241

0 0 225 0 0

1,319 697 1,693 448 23,261

Colorado ...................... Connecticut ................. Delaware ...................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................

4,227 0 0 0 0

2,205 0 0 0 0

2,022 0 0 0 0

876 0 0 0 0

61,764 42,723 12,829 238,375 171,621

78 459 0 170 0

1,071 956 0 28,671 9,087

Hawaii .......................... Idaho ............................ Illinois .......................... Indiana ......................... Iowa .............................

0 0 11,125 7,765 1,684

0 0 8,030 6,573 1,584

0 0 3,095 1,192 100

1,621 0 0 0 0

16,422 18,447 142,991 77,295 36,102

0 0 0 0 0

2,082 152 9,949 2,442 3,747

Kansas ......................... Kentucky ..................... Louisiana ..................... Maine ........................... Maryland .....................

2,173 29,446 236 0 3,863

2,080 17,792 75 0 3,288

93 11,654 161 0 575

0 0 0 0 4

41,353 59,875 56,140 20,320 126,938

0 260 0 0 643

2,023 1,510 2,024 473 9,235

Massachusetts ............. Michigan ...................... Minnesota .................... Mississippi ................... Missouri .......................

0 0 0 136 1,444

0 0 0 0 1,098

0 0 0 136 346

0 0 0 0 0

91,821 113,167 55,279 45,380 71,318

909 0 0 0 0

2,177 5,095 1,110 1,149 4,069

Montana ...................... Nebraska ...................... Nevada ......................... New Hampshire .......... New Jersey ...................

4,797 0 0 0 0

3,807 0 0 0 0

990 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

33,716 27,507 39,128 40,246 107,548

0 0 0 0 1,591

529 3,898 1,474 1,063 3,802

New Mexico ................. New York ..................... North Carolina ............ North Dakota .............. Ohio .............................

2,477 0 0 2,487 10,186

1,762 0 0 1,944 8,294

715 0 0 543 1,892

0 0 0 0 0

55,906 304,035 101,239 14,569 95,665

0 20 0 0 257

2,493 21,029 7,721 15 9,495

Oklahoma .................... Oregon ......................... Pennsylvania ............... Rhode Island ............... South Carolina ............

2,789 0 33,706 0 0

1,801 0 24,435 0 0

988 0 9,271 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

52,673 46,707 131,147 17,821 62,800

353 120 0 0 0

6,425 627 3,414 866 3,610

South Dakota ............... Tennessee ..................... Texas ............................ Utah ............................. Vermont .......................

0 486 3,753 3,723 0

0 0 2,388 2,024 0

0 486 1,365 1,699 0

0 0 0 0 0

33,205 69,988 219,893 29,230 20,460

0 39 0 0 0

109 3,163 14,341 0 1,032

Virginia ........................ Washington .................. West Virginia ............... Wisconsin .................... Wyoming .....................

9,421 0 32,722 0 24,575

6,283 0 20,455 0 22,562

3,138 0 12,267 0 2,013

0 0 0 0 0

169,460 83,979 43,136 61,042 13,677

169 476 0 0 0

1,949 940 629 2,997 206

District of Columbia ... American Samoa ......... Fed. States of Micronesia .......... Guam ........................... Marshall Islands .........

0 0

0 0

0 0

0 33,939

54,464 2,374

590 0

615 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

103,846 36,280 53,652

0 8,526 0

0 0 0

0 62 0

Northern Marianas ..... Palau ............................ Puerto Rico .................. Virgin Islands .............. Undistributed ..............

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

19,135 42,620 0 67,826 5,173

2,300 0 31,025 6,890 254

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 3,574 0 0

See footnotes at end of table

The Council of State Governments

71


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Justice—Con’t Office of Justice Programs

State and outlying area

Total

Corrections, probation & payroll

Domestic Crime preparedness victims & anti-terrorism programs programs

Education research, Juvenile & statistics justice programs programs

Law Enforcement Assistance

Substance abuse programs

Other

United States, total ......

$3,953,682

$359,867

$495,210

$118,842

$176,458

$428,398

$2,374,907

$840,474

$95,196

Alabama ...................... Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ Arkansas ...................... California ....................

53,776 26,745 76,564 32,081 472,980

2,058 740 6,775 1,657 28,345

7,547 2,816 8,412 3,449 92,916

337 0 870 1,174 12,286

1,877 1,735 6,365 1,354 20,906

6,017 4,012 7,808 2,893 45,702

35,940 17,442 46,334 31,554 272,825

13,005 5,711 17,732 7,282 92,454

1,489 580 2,521 605 6,671

Colorado ...................... Connecticut ................. Delaware ...................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................

60,615 41,308 12,829 209,534 162,534

5,857 1,471 2,506 22,049 26,290

8,039 4,443 1,561 29,553 12,099

1,666 19 0 7,514 1,504

3,604 3,162 555 9,646 1,696

9,181 3,485 2,880 10,342 11,645

32,268 28,728 5,327 130,430 109,300

13,481 10,767 2,415 39,343 18,924

2,169 194 379 4,239 1,897

Hawaii .......................... Idaho ............................ Illinois .......................... Indiana ......................... Iowa .............................

14,340 18,295 133,042 74,853 32,355

62 850 8,223 19,258 378

2,858 2,203 25,733 7,829 5,964

195 0 7,282 986 1,421

316 416 2,750 2,386 932

3,761 3,104 13,551 7,803 4,491

7,148 11,722 75,503 36,591 19,169

3,166 5,110 21,473 10,889 9,114

577 345 1,676 2,172 439

Kansas ......................... Kentucky ..................... Louisiana ..................... Maine ........................... Maryland .....................

39,330 58,105 54,116 19,847 117,060

5,425 4,073 7,145 821 8,229

5,159 4,841 6,436 2,176 8,596

1,779 735 2,135 1,701 2,342

625 3,458 426 682 5,445

4,688 5,016 5,995 2,771 12,885

21,564 39,982 31,979 11,696 79,563

10,195 19,916 8,843 3,654 23,218

126 1,288 1,748 166 1,689

Massachusetts ............. Michigan ...................... Minnesota .................... Mississippi ................... Missouri .......................

88,735 108,072 54,169 44,231 67,249

8,406 23,698 4,518 12,932 1,349

9,906 11,818 5,733 3,791 8,477

5,681 3,320 1,109 152 1,498

10,333 1,876 2,312 1,417 7,075

9,973 10,522 6,126 1,538 7,149

44,436 56,838 34,371 24,401 41,701

14,011 21,670 9,207 9,069 14,799

1,689 1,755 978 416 2,351

Montana ...................... Nebraska ...................... Nevada ......................... New Hampshire .......... New Jersey ...................

33,187 23,609 37,654 39,183 102,155

6,196 0 1,023 1,201 26,473

2,067 3,446 2,922 2,205 10,445

984 230 145 7,703 335

2,835 1,227 905 3,517 697

3,286 3,881 7,080 3,112 5,411

17,819 14,825 25,579 21,445 58,794

3,647 5,671 11,356 9,051 16,704

1,041 917 2,135 76 8,012

New Mexico ................. New York ..................... North Carolina ............ North Dakota .............. Ohio .............................

53,413 282,986 93,518 14,554 85,913

2,100 30,603 13,382 1,932 1,576

3,458 25,826 12,863 1,720 16,274

7,260 8,413 767 504 2,762

1,459 5,000 10,223 399 2,641

3,292 25,748 7,928 2,633 6,784

35,844 187,396 48,355 7,366 55,876

16,089 70,544 19,106 2,816 22,750

2,609 5,405 862 704 2,542

Oklahoma .................... Oregon ......................... Pennsylvania ............... Rhode Island ............... South Carolina ............

45,895 45,960 127,733 16,955 59,190

532 2,448 7,979 509 5,860

5,958 4,709 21,227 2,634 7,118

7,595 23 822 1,123 3,101

78 2,145 9,354 1,605 7,609

5,528 8,687 19,811 2,684 5,713

26,204 27,948 68,540 8,400 29,789

8,128 8,892 30,941 2,567 10,907

1,105 2,446 2,214 379 753

South Dakota ............... Tennessee ..................... Texas ............................ Utah ............................. Vermont .......................

33,096 66,786 205,552 29,230 19,428

10,264 1,922 11,535 5,016 294

1,971 12,951 27,570 3,984 1,987

220 1,096 4,965 356 718

2,703 5,259 770 1,169 426

3,284 6,843 24,637 2,861 2,784

14,654 38,715 136,075 15,844 13,219

3,624 13,222 61,051 6,087 2,818

705 1,352 -452 642 160

Virginia ........................ Washington .................. West Virginia ............... Wisconsin .................... Wyoming .....................

167,342 82,563 42,507 58,045 13,471

17,449 4,054 2,840 362 986

10,082 11,126 3,074 7,181 1,175

6,169 3,938 1,930 1,063 0

5,176 3,005 5,978 2,524 784

32,395 7,154 4,695 9,594 3,309

96,071 53,286 23,990 37,321 7,217

48,953 13,162 7,333 14,491 3,269

7,203 889 10,269 734 851

District of Columbia ... American Samoa ......... Fed. States of Micronesia .......... Guam ........................... Marshall Islands .........

53,259 2,374

0 0

1,999 242

460 0

6,924 256

6,336 538

37,540 1,338

10,030 1,053

2,726 0

0 8,464 0

0 -100 0

0 342 0

0 287 0

0 175 0

0 2,768 0

0 4,992 0

0 1,690 0

0 546 0

Northern Marianas ..... Palau ............................ Puerto Rico .................. Virgin Islands .............. Undistributed ..............

2,300 0 27,451 6,890 254

0 0 66 250 0

423 0 5,146 730 0

0 0 0 167 0

79 0 7 180 0

668 0 4,127 1,489 0

1,130 0 18,105 4,074 254

914 0 7,005 1,155 0

0 0 99 113 0

See footnotes at end of table

72

The Book of the States 2005


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued

Department of Labor Employment and Training Administration Occpn’l Vet. Health Emplmnt. and and Safety Training Admin. Admin.

Nat’l Fndn. on the Arts and the Hum.

Nbrhd. Reinvestment Corp.

$141,670 $192,262

Total (c)

Bureau of Labor Statistics

Total

State Unemplmnt. Ins. and Emplmnt Svc. (b)

Other (b)

Mine Health and Safety Admin.

United States, total ..

$8,017,978

$90,805

$7,585,018

$2,709,148

$3,416,538

$1,459,332

$8,223

$35,887

$69,861

Alabama ................. Alaska ..................... Arizona ................... Arkansas ................ California ...............

123,645 66,443 118,463 71,901 1,125,810

1,385 919 1,260 934 8,718

117,828 61,924 112,322 68,029 1,064,062

33,557 23,928 34,060 23,528 390,230

63,552 26,680 54,766 31,899 571,707

20,719 11,316 23,496 12,602 102,125

184 43 283 102 525

1,458 1,895 2,231 1,141 30,650

2,790 1,662 2,367 1,695 21,855

691 746 671 1,006 1,065

143 416 892 628 14,228

Colorado ................. Connecticut ............ Delaware ................. Florida .................... Georgia ...................

89,292 96,903 20,335 245,011 157,545

1,608 1,756 666 3,210 1,873

82,682 89,320 18,648 231,674 150,855

42,471 51,039 8,799 77,977 48,132

27,114 27,055 7,985 118,995 84,579

13,097 11,226 1,864 34,702 18,144

154 39 0 224 204

961 1,638 414 1,789 1,394

3,887 4,150 607 8,114 3,219

772 1,309 378 710 504

1,491 1,165 30 2,433 843

Hawaii .................... Idaho ...................... Illinois ..................... Indiana ................... Iowa ........................

51,256 39,845 348,325 99,093 57,744

777 740 2,963 1,368 2,070

47,596 37,616 333,577 90,648 50,268

14,776 20,045 130,348 37,905 24,056

18,081 9,562 171,518 37,051 12,037

14,739 8,009 31,711 15,692 14,175

0 91 211 130 152

2,128 462 1,509 2,971 2,245

755 936 10,065 3,976 3,009

591 681 739 730 588

127 1,750 909 889 268

Kansas .................... Kentucky ................ Louisiana ................ Maine ..................... Maryland ................

55,103 104,873 120,154 42,147 191,700

1,083 1,155 1,475 1,286 1,425

51,899 97,967 116,368 38,148 181,021

18,572 27,437 29,380 14,335 55,820

16,649 43,468 77,516 13,151 55,326

16,678 27,062 9,472 10,662 69,875

58 603 0 71 0

669 3,212 747 750 3,918

1,394 1,936 1,564 1,892 5,336

386 758 597 550 593

525 448 465 138 1,894

Massachusetts ......... Michigan ................ Minnesota ............... Mississippi .............. Missouri ..................

155,033 278,282 112,854 81,200 109,625

2,167 2,908 1,976 701 1,042

145,813 257,003 101,598 78,681 103,635

81,580 106,295 47,653 19,264 37,633

45,491 109,409 31,265 49,928 45,141

18,742 41,299 22,680 9,489 20,861

60 198 262 73 87

1,345 10,474 4,804 523 823

5,648 7,699 4,214 1,222 4,038

768 751 653 730 497

3,093 490 949 92 722

Montana ................. Nebraska ................ Nevada .................... New Hampshire ...... New Jersey .............

28,187 24,838 47,764 27,967 157,884

923 952 855 753 2,719

25,087 22,314 43,674 25,232 148,572

9,301 11,917 25,756 13,977 100,680

11,803 5,925 14,857 9,064 37,779

3,983 4,472 3,061 2,191 10,113

125 61 173 19 46

417 547 1,823 411 2,972

1,635 964 1,239 1,552 3,575

685 660 665 610 783

334 214 148 1,627 295

New Mexico ............ New York ................ North Carolina ....... North Dakota ......... Ohio ........................

63,962 561,316 193,282 18,698 286,305

993 4,827 2,429 670 5,132

60,779 536,783 180,447 17,162 269,986

16,358 165,061 67,985 6,934 88,768

31,544 236,466 45,596 8,626 148,615

12,877 135,256 66,866 1,602 32,603

214 303 101 63 227

869 6,837 6,321 197 1,438

1,107 12,566 3,984 606 9,522

845 677 730 594 626

789 7,524 2,061 473 3,933

Oklahoma ............... Oregon .................... Pennsylvania .......... Rhode Island .......... South Carolina .......

72,267 125,451 348,230 32,847 89,889

1,161 1,529 3,110 823 1,309

66,841 115,511 334,809 30,777 83,794

20,565 42,094 136,946 16,433 31,613

33,253 55,621 132,784 11,005 37,349

13,023 17,796 65,079 3,339 14,832

97 147 509 0 72

1,218 4,737 1,598 605 2,388

2,950 3,527 8,204 642 2,326

643 291 515 506 955

1,015 666 739 1,155 0

South Dakota .......... Tennessee ................ Texas ....................... Utah ........................ Vermont ..................

29,377 135,868 464,653 54,730 23,433

669 1,348 4,145 1,337 616

27,730 126,711 447,949 50,683 20,735

6,474 35,537 122,250 30,839 7,585

10,909 62,189 248,372 10,968 9,123

10,347 28,985 77,327 8,876 4,027

48 158 651 160 0

403 4,127 2,435 1,569 868

527 3,524 9,473 981 1,214

824 604 768 589 556

277 1,503 4,494 392 1,811

Virginia ................... Washington ............ West Virginia .......... Wisconsin ............... Wyoming ................

257,262 247,514 60,187 146,526 19,115

1,850 1,721 1,025 1,944 759

247,959 232,625 57,163 137,015 16,775

37,130 80,753 15,092 64,605 6,554

50,096 116,442 37,842 39,530 9,140

160,733 35,430 4,229 32,880 1,081

259 129 490 220 149

3,729 7,864 491 3,660 938

3,465 5,175 1,018 3,687 494

912 793 641 559 489

1,767 640 784 1,417 0

District of Columbia American Samoa .... Fed. States of Micronesia ..... Guam ...................... Marshall Islands .....

274,757 1,196

764 0

271,979 1,196

129,123 0

27,395 323

115,461 873

0 0

463 0

1,551 0

557 169

170 0

934 2,677 1,245

0 74 0

934 2,396 1,245

0 10 0

934 1,435 1,245

0 951 0

0 0 0

0 207 0

0 0 0

0 198 0

0 0 0

Northern Marianas Palau ....................... Puerto Rico ............. Virgin Islands ......... Undistributed .........

1,894 362 246,603 5,817 2,359

0 0 663 240 0

1,873 362 243,481 5,257 0

20 0 18,346 1,622 0

253 362 217,310 2,458 0

1,600 0 7,825 1,177 0

0 0 0 0 48

21 0 2,091 275 0

0 0 368 45 2,311

436 8 295 240 0

0 0 429 0 176

State and outlying area

Workforce Investment (b)

See footnotes at end of table

The Council of State Governments

73


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Transportation Federal Highway Administration

State and outlying area

Social Security Administration State supplemental Justice security income Institute

TVA payments in lieu of taxes

Total

Total

$2,680,905

$29,650,561

$318,281

$28,613,682

Demonstration Highway projects Trust Fund

Federal Motor Carrier Safety Admin.

Other

United States, total ......

$30,722

$2,033

Alabama ...................... Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ Arkansas ...................... California ....................

434 174 266 128 5,023

10 1 15 2 2

77,524 0 0 0 0

692,803 642,987 604,191 506,278 4,350,494

57,465 152,845 72,357 34,165 208,646

586,431 447,843 482,108 441,238 2,793,752

57 34,927 708 43,439 1,706

529,746 381,394 468,797 391,788 2,727,031

56,628 31,522 12,603 6,011 65,015

2,045 934 3,087 1,934 10,209

Colorado ...................... Connecticut ................. Delaware ...................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................

261 314 66 1,253 1,430

26 0 0 2 2

0 0 0 0 5,161

510,824 481,507 127,070 2,030,052 961,716

55,649 6,742 2,478 159,686 46,298

409,324 386,823 104,933 1,657,738 781,141

1,354 1 7,124 4,723 305

400,956 386,786 96,980 1,650,418 777,787

7,014 36 829 2,597 3,049

1,928 1,016 406 2,712 5,743

Hawaii .......................... Idaho ............................ Illinois .......................... Indiana ......................... Iowa .............................

29 84 1,592 267 359

13 5 45 1 1

0 0 331 0 0

153,680 276,132 1,367,459 736,055 420,786

23,816 29,541 71,351 45,472 36,079

122,322 235,964 871,025 616,328 353,387

6,704 3,439 1,989 1,374 7,934

114,678 208,782 868,749 614,831 345,345

940 23,743 287 123 108

230 1,305 4,271 3,560 2,974

Kansas ......................... Kentucky ..................... Louisiana ..................... Maine ........................... Maryland .....................

466 923 794 147 937

1 1 0 6 64

0 26,389 0 0 0

400,542 642,316 644,798 213,492 677,553

21,822 64,457 43,650 17,446 22,052

358,362 528,692 518,438 181,955 494,626

146 12,166 13 173 4,768

357,609 509,171 513,949 180,641 425,455

607 7,355 4,476 1,141 64,403

2,479 4,854 2,110 265 603

Massachusetts ............. Michigan ...................... Minnesota .................... Mississippi ................... Missouri .......................

484 1,767 548 141 240

15 216 6 45 1

0 0 0 18,130 0

738,935 949,827 557,575 466,473 885,553

63,398 80,803 56,567 29,126 57,351

497,799 791,419 378,485 405,451 737,094

261 7,877 1,129 29,488 9,472

497,086 776,453 366,821 364,200 724,730

452 7,089 10,535 11,763 2,892

2,130 4,614 3,119 2,590 3,148

Montana ...................... Nebraska ...................... Nevada ......................... New Hampshire .......... New Jersey ...................

109 78 124 13 379

8 0 1 0 26

0 0 0 0 0

65,977 257,112 286,035 185,332 977,799

32,957 18,677 55,297 33,735 28,273

16,836 224,610 200,888 142,542 726,626

416 513 17,337 1,929 6,802

1,211 222,197 180,236 140,393 719,824

15,209 1,900 3,315 220 0

1,211 2,222 1,457 1,118 2,866

New Mexico ................. New York ..................... North Carolina ............ North Dakota .............. Ohio .............................

211 1,317 1,004 1 2,324

94 168 0 0 0

0 0 1,557 0 0

310,994 2,198,722 988,058 212,989 1,185,831

16,670 117,963 72,424 14,864 66,078

270,533 1,261,038 826,519 184,921 924,166

880 5,381 713 2,086 5,799

261,460 1,250,255 815,108 182,491 918,055

8,193 5,402 10,698 344 312

2,222 9,922 3,839 1,578 7,349

Oklahoma .................... Oregon ......................... Pennsylvania ............... Rhode Island ............... South Carolina ............

424 26 2,331 41 585

0 2 1 18 0

0 0 0 0 0

492,900 628,351 1,824,190 175,232 507,731

33,032 33,355 108,430 13,209 21,665

431,925 526,037 1,367,694 143,597 443,890

-67 817 2,750 1,508 1,435

398,477 378,464 1,346,714 141,507 438,470

33,515 146,756 18,230 582 3,985

3,230 2,341 5,768 437 2,605

South Dakota ............... Tennessee ..................... Texas ............................ Utah ............................. Vermont .......................

196 371 1,531 189 210

13 529 3 0 24

0 200,171 0 0 0

252,308 671,814 3,075,609 287,079 124,100

16,194 60,014 153,786 23,851 2,222

224,054 540,535 2,611,565 218,621 107,999

15,846 3,429 10,062 1,000 52

203,606 532,061 2,595,257 215,206 107,664

4,602 5,045 6,246 2,415 283

615 3,533 16,915 1,364 756

Virginia ........................ Washington .................. West Virginia ............... Wisconsin .................... Wyoming .....................

503 207 200 105 35

497 1 69 0 0

104 0 0 0 0

850,244 853,864 462,017 686,008 281,520

43,502 51,302 23,437 46,410 20,345

706,523 611,369 405,606 587,380 248,647

6,629 4,043 24,343 1,709 10,095

696,769 554,249 328,223 579,126 232,874

3,125 53,077 53,040 6,545 5,678

3,471 3,049 1,133 3,834 716

District of Columbia ... American Samoa ......... Fed. States of Micronesia .......... Guam ........................... Marshall Islands .........

81 0

99 0

0 0

406,863 25,433

430 18,177

156,687 6,075

0 0

151,808 6,075

4,879 0

467 278

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 20,846 0

0 5,709 0

0 13,937 0

0 0 0

0 13,937 0

0 0 0

0 156 0

Northern Marianas ..... Palau ............................ Puerto Rico .................. Virgin Islands .............. Undistributed ..............

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

12,421 0 191,591 22,463 353,291

9,834 0 7,134 8,615 64,052

1,573 0 58,702 12,310 264,478

0 0 0 0 11,497

1,573 0 58,607 12,310 249,292

0 0 95 0 3,689

317 0 105 115 15,448

See footnotes at end of table

74

The Book of the States 2005

$329,367 $38,913,822

Federal Aviation Administration

$718,598 $168,703


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Transportation

State and outlying area

Department of the Treasury

National Federal Federal Highway Research and Railroad Transit Traffice Safety Special Projects Administration Administration Administration Administration

Total

Dept. of the Treasurey Asset Forfeiture Fund

Other (d)

Payments to Department Dist. of of Columbia and Veterans Metro System Affairs (b) (WMATA (d))

United States, total ...

$6,462

$5,841,403

$419,473

$146,315

$5,412,773

$54,190

$5,358,583

$648,439

$401,306

Alabama ................... Alaska ....................... Arizona ..................... Arkansas ................... California .................

88 0 3 0 45

38,619 34,962 41,225 21,727 1,275,777

6,202 6,334 3,256 5,761 54,881

1,953 69 2,155 1,453 7,184

76,393 25,052 90,463 45,596 579,394

781 52 3,229 129 3,488

75,612 25,000 87,234 45,467 575,906

8,466 218 4,715 1,540 46,602

0 0 0 0 0

Colorado ................... Connecticut .............. Delaware ................... Florida ...................... Georgia .....................

0 0 44 0 0

38,323 80,217 16,098 199,090 112,995

4,415 6,018 3,044 9,186 14,265

1,185 691 67 1,640 1,274

73,298 57,984 25,013 278,106 139,932

164 81 13 6,364 740

73,134 57,903 25,000 271,742 139,192

12,060 6,430 32 8,958 11,553

0 0 0 0 0

Hawaii ....................... Idaho ......................... Illinois ....................... Indiana ...................... Iowa ..........................

0 0 58 0 404

5,824 6,619 405,554 53,475 20,562

1,418 1,572 7,962 15,960 4,933

70 1,131 7,238 1,260 2,447

25,005 25,045 213,214 103,848 49,923

5 45 2,054 402 168

25,000 25,000 211,160 103,446 49,755

0 11,249 18,980 6,759 13,850

0 0 0 0 0

Kansas ...................... Kentucky .................. Louisiana .................. Maine ........................ Maryland ..................

0 0 0 0 0

13,386 38,602 71,359 12,738 146,661

3,096 4,756 7,847 783 12,685

1,397 955 1,394 305 926

45,968 68,990 76,152 25,035 92,585

258 264 166 35 2,378

45,710 68,726 75,986 25,000 90,207

11,309 10,872 7,314 18,123 4,920

0 0 0 0 0

Massachusetts .......... Michigan ................... Minnesota ................. Mississippi ................ Missouri ....................

0 0 1,000 48 163

163,826 64,881 105,270 21,896 75,018

9,159 6,953 7,689 6,661 11,036

2,623 1,157 5,445 701 1,743

109,266 169,904 83,681 48,583 95,443

1,107 925 37 216 310

108,159 168,979 83,644 48,367 95,133

33,850 17,255 14,928 11,715 21,873

0 0 0 0 0

Montana ................... Nebraska ................... Nevada ...................... New Hampshire ....... New Jersey ................

136 501 0 0 0

6,575 8,047 25,570 6,186 211,533

6,851 2,700 2,467 1,187 6,957

1,411 355 356 564 1,544

25,109 29,793 34,315 25,043 145,535

109 697 339 43 2,410

25,000 29,096 33,976 25,000 143,125

4,116 10,392 5,924 3,814 49,781

0 0 0 0 0

New Mexico .............. New York .................. North Carolina ......... North Dakota ........... Ohio ..........................

0 0 0 0 0

16,299 787,286 79,377 6,168 171,143

4,790 18,003 3,955 3,750 15,483

480 4,510 1,944 1,708 1,612

31,231 333,576 138,103 25,002 193,366

266 10,678 1,244 1 333

30,965 322,898 136,859 25,001 193,033

3,558 20,764 3,903 3,322 13,726

0 0 0 0 0

Oklahoma ................. Oregon ...................... Pennsylvania ............ Rhode Island ............ South Carolina .........

0 3,518 95 0 97

19,759 55,381 329,352 12,569 29,049

3,487 7,183 10,200 3,728 9,704

1,467 536 2,651 1,692 721

58,763 59,633 209,373 25,076 69,170

54 1,460 521 64 955

58,709 58,173 208,852 25,012 68,215

28,858 2,461 24,707 7,191 24,946

0 0 0 0 0

South Dakota ............ Tennessee .................. Texas ......................... Utah .......................... Vermont ....................

0 0 0 242 0

4,390 53,015 264,431 39,020 10,757

6,600 12,457 22,354 2,979 2,028

455 2,260 6,558 1,002 338

25,007 97,238 361,966 38,049 25,030

0 311 7,431 15 19

25,007 96,927 354,535 38,034 25,011

1,890 5,409 28,382 2,337 2,952

0 0 0 0 0

Virginia ..................... Washington ............... West Virginia ............ Wisconsin ................. Wyoming ..................

0 0 20 0 0

82,704 178,791 23,110 42,262 3,317

11,376 7,753 5,919 4,734 8,102

2,668 1,600 2,792 1,388 393

121,683 100,828 30,813 91,205 25,006

1,330 521 66 6 6

120,353 100,307 30,747 91,199 25,000

11,293 41,071 17,426 22,802 1,956

0 0 0 0 0

District of Columbia American Samoa ...... Fed. States of Micronesia ....... Guam ........................ Marshall Islands ......

0 0

189,027 259

1,835 512

58,417 132

25,216 5,000

195 0

25,021 5,000

922 0

401,306 0

0 0 0

0 476 0

0 568 0

0 0 0

0 5,000 0

0 0 0

0 5,000 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

Northern Marianas .. Palau ......................... Puerto Rico ............... Virgin Islands ........... Undistributed ...........

0 0 0 0 0

174 0 120,054 609 9

472 0 5,400 763 9,304

51 0 196 51 0

5,000 0 423,771 5,000 0

0 0 1,705 0 0

5,000 0 422,066 5,000 0

0 0 965 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

See footnotes at end of table

The Council of State Governments

75


FEDERAL AID

FEDERAL AID TO STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, SELECTED PROGRAMS BY STATE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, Federal Aid to States for Fiscal Year 2003, September 2004. Note: Negative amounts (-) are refunds (from the recipients) of advances from a prior year, or represent reductions in the amount of funds originally obligated to the recipients for the particular program or program category during the fiscal year. All amounts unless otherwise footnoted, represent actual expenditures of the federal government during the indicated (FY 2003) fiscal year. Key: (a) For Puerto Rico, amount shown is for the nutritional assistance grant pro-

76

The Book of the States 2005

gram. All other amounts are grant payments for food stamp administration. (b) The data were extracted from the FY 2000 quarterly data files submitted to the Federal Assistance Award System, since FY 2003 FAS data were not available at the time of publication. (c) Column data will not add to total due to supplemental data for Puerto Rico extracted from the FY 2005 Budget of the U.S. Government. FY 2003 FAS data were not available at the time of publication. (d) The data were extracted from the Appendix, FY 2005 Budget of the U.S. Government, since FY 2003 FAS data were not available at time of publication.


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

Table 2.3 SUMMARY OF FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In millions of dollars) State and outlying area

Total

Retirement and disability

Other direct payments

Grants

Procurement

Salaries and wages

United States ......................

$2,061,486

$636,239

$446,119

$441,038

$327,413

$210,677

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

36,871 7,944 37,801 18,340 219,706

12,232 1,041 12,022 7,038 61,236

7,698 584 6,653 4,558 49,480

6,649 3,022 7,235 4,541 51,329

7,067 1,680 8,557 864 37,050

3,224 1,617 3,335 1,339 20,611

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

28,874 28,595 5,061 113,341 51,910

8,375 7,549 1,945 45,192 16,666

5,014 5,669 1,201 30,041 11,426

6,014 5,376 1,181 17,463 10,561

5,142 8,484 245 10,899 5,243

4,329 1,516 489 9,746 8,015

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

11,269 8,654 73,020 35,525 17,550

3,014 2,865 24,786 13,394 6,780

1,502 1,566 20,232 9,178 4,654

1,911 1,858 15,720 7,313 3,877

1,978 1,531 5,729 3,302 1,109

2,864 834 6,553 2,338 1,129

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

18,208 31,153 31,646 9,966 57,646

6,196 10,169 9,559 3,403 13,306

4,469 6,119 8,424 1,753 9,161

3,415 6,634 7,820 2,610 8,632

2,020 5,119 3,195 1,312 16,216

2,108 3,112 2,648 888 10,331

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

51,265 57,870 27,580 21,741 43,874

13,794 22,042 9,627 6,923 13,509

12,339 15,556 6,514 4,904 9,887

13,328 12,970 6,914 5,318 8,655

8,357 3,884 2,406 2,626 7,992

3,446 3,418 2,120 1,970 3,832

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

7,092 11,000 11,637 7,349 53,679

2,315 3,956 4,708 2,838 18,388

1,497 2,732 2,280 1,336 14,190

1,938 2,512 1,955 1,865 11,481

497 608 1,472 738 5,461

845 1,192 1,222 571 4,159

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

18,736 137,898 51,766 5,726 69,902

4,388 40,506 18,806 1,447 25,348

2,281 33,524 11,012 1,627 16,957

4,322 47,575 11,613 1,537 15,687

5,819 7,758 3,794 398 6,548

1,926 8,535 6,541 717 5,362

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

25,254 21,253 90,350 8,036 28,038

8,772 8,024 32,072 2,535 10,106

5,505 5,147 25,156 1,791 5,486

5,136 5,103 18,624 2,234 5,969

2,488 1198 8,137 659 3,614

3,353 1,781 6,363 817 2,863

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

6,202 42,602 140,451 13,500 4,443

1,809 13,744 39,149 3,892 1,358

1,641 8,922 29,117 2,051 828

1,698 9,057 28,423 2,845 1,331

381 7,522 29,823 2,665 566

673 3,357 13,939 2,047 360

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

82,454 43,368 14,226 30,237 4,226

19,553 13,587 5,663 11,618 1,152

9,420 8,513 3,048 7,282 602

7,886 8,881 3,562 7,544 1,616

30,839 6,629 665 2,008 346

14,756 5,758 1,289 1,785 510

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Fed. States of Micronesia . Guam ...................................

34,750 198 145 1,539

1,934 41 0 207

2,370 12 7 92

4,310 110 136 400

11,376 28 1 526

14,760 7 0 315

Marshall Islands ................ No. Mariana Islands .......... Palau .................................... Puerto Rico ......................... Virgin Islands ..................... Undistributed .....................

182 141 53 14,661 615 34,366

1 22 0 5,477 146 14

0 15 1 2,847 107 141

66 90 51 4,808 282 43

115 8 1 561 26 32,133

0 6 0 968 55 2,035

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004.

The Council of State Governments

77


78

Total

$636,238,733

12,232,032 1,040,560 12,021,799 7,038,393 61,235,997

8,374,763 7,549,272 1,945,047 45,191,664 16,665,866

3,014,060 2,864,526 24,785,986 13,393,781 6,780,030

6,195,937 10,168,614 9,559,415 3,402,746 13,306,464

13,793,808 22,042,243 9,627,064 69,222,911 13,508,667

2,315,005 3,956,001 4,707,666 2,837,972 18,388,407

State and outlying area

United States ......................

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

The Book of the States 2005

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey .......................... 1,028,927 1,935,110 2,249,780 1,464,553 10,653,417

7,234,895 11,793,064 5,249,256 2,689,967 6,492,508

3,094,855 3,931,319 3,732,585 1,518,318 5,122,027

1,396,138 1,355,160 13,158,553 7,141,750 3,761,442

3,612,370 4,580,976 992,545 23,066,580 6,835,052

4,727,454 349,955 5,862,970 2,964,026 29,608,935

$305,159,678

Retirement insurance payments

326,217 588,309 534,109 354,821 2,739,321

1,935,032 3,795,476 1,504,768 1,051,070 2,061,769

937,197 1,602,809 1,909,986 447,471 1,578,364

303,241 393,787 4,153,128 2,246,429 1,157,681

1,064,106 1,098,042 271,898 578,984 2,337,539

1,821,795 119,511 1,511,898 1,023,813 8,358,408

$93,304,326

Survivors insurance payments

247,725 366,366 515,343 355,563 2,061,764

1,858,583 3,186,292 1,025,392 1,221,518 1,830,403

614,598 1,909,855 1,466,456 487,971 1,111,141

232,869 319,213 2,839,466 1,693,822 702,455

865,674 835,455 236,256 4,516,207 2,312,349

1,880,893 113,113 1,353,461 1,115,684 6,976,636

$77,597,267

Disability insurance payments

Social Security payments

68,070 102,204 146,136 62,070 710,312

760,329 1,125,688 342,623 568,947 544,554

180,836 863,478 800,162 142,935 475,075

108,907 95,544 1,389,421 473,696 189,990

259,319 261,708 64,028 1,993,325 909,435

756,410 44,193 464,694 376,005 4,907,257

$32,494,880

Supplemental security income payments

241,601 262,755 444,248 249,195 1,149,977

916,061 822,949 524,720 498,259 1,057,772

485,447 656,624 536,115 293,535 3,363,094

527,747 257,202 1,330,115 704,828 402,475

934,855 312,280 152,482 3,498,369 1,585,812

1,259,667 165,627 1,022,979 485,563 4,678,750

$51,339,395

Civilian

118,321 220,627 478,199 170,598 316,373

298,002 359,399 221,529 392,504 531,357

334,161 361,195 428,179 178,319 905,608

276,463 184,503 527,213 316,060 142,535

928,742 170,933 118,109 3,518,148 1,382,658

857,350 129,654 938,866 389,649 3,455,792

$33,428,532

Military

Federal retirement and disability benefits

Table 2.4 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR DIRECT PAYMENTS FOR INDIVIDUALS FOR RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY, FOR SELECTED PROGRAMS, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In thousands of dollars)

110,221 180,477 194,037 119,796 369,670

456,777 423,056 326,919 243,498 388,531

181,092 341,866 332,438 216,656 345,425

112,991 125,692 425,528 312,302 154,023

379,797 1,533,766 54,483 1,545,179 659,365

439,198 94,458 498,963 341,940 1,705,756

$20,622,189

26,728 47,983 53,491 27,025 103,925

119,350 1,555,818 88,845 119,172 153,518

63,164 134,042 170,961 49,225 106,623

25,215 30,469 164,916 96,359 59,749

94,505 38,122 15,483 494,080 259,808

220,098 8,671 132,534 123,716 556,491

$6,956,813

Other benefit payments

Veteran benefits Payments for service connected disability

Other

147,196 252,172 92,323 34,351 283,649

214,780 380,501 343,011 137,976 448,255

304,588 367,425 182,532 68,315 299,106

30,489 102,956 797,646 408,536 209,680

215,394 97,990 39,526 800,792 383,846

269,167 15,379 235,434 197,996 976,972

$15,335,652

FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES


4,387,915 40,505,751 18,805,741 1,447,202 25,347,613

8,772,478 8,024,109 32,072,141 2,534,589 10,105,743

1,808,942 13,744,487 39,148,877 3,891,861 1,357,693

19,553,290 13,587,099 5,663,170 11,618,327 1,151,875

1,934,244 40,988 471 206,531 992

22,320 455 5,477,373 145,757 14,008

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Fed. States of Micronesia ... Guam ................................... Marshall Islands ................

No. Mariana Islands .......... Palau .................................... Puerto Rico ......................... Virgin Islands ..................... Undistributed ..................... 5,324 152 2,237,235 83,630 0

411,453 10,571 151 65,600 585

6,821,366 6,260,669 2,170,265 6,600,824 532,867

850,803 6,109,114 17,006,775 1,740,730 707,786

3,737,576 4,117,016 16,613,040 1,325,569 4,381,256

1,715,423 21,749,984 8,848,486 695,024 12,735,916

Retirement insurance payments

4,405 126 988,982 22,451 0

131,698 10,579 42 27,637 265

2,119,130 1,695,878 973,619 1,842,939 156,523

277,641 2,066,520 6,302,423 498,349 198,231

1,283,374 1,111,958 5,236,240 311,799 1,330,217

558,516 5,828,090 2,451,600 263,402 4,604,530

Survivors insurance payments

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004.

Total

State and outlying area

1,206 7 1,498,242 17,230 0

135,605 9,833 19 14,284 96

1,960,462 1,404,787 1,109,408 1,294,386 112,839

163,610 2,040,487 4,098,860 332,436 174,124

985,089 879,823 3,613,259 337,697 1,519,426

488,559 5,384,359 2,763,871 125,166 2,879,580

Disability insurance payments

Social Security payments

3,831 0 0 0 0

107,055 0 0 0 0

616,469 568,401 375,390 424,290 26,406

55,689 740,140 1,997,670 105,303 53,160

350,857 284,516 1,543,661 131,892 479,137

236,692 3,043,360 844,294 33,259 1,285,158

Supplemental security income payments

5,551 135 210,870 14,942 106

1,006,157 1,619 169 58,215 20

3,460,011 1,328,170 332,370 510,598 117,057

184,220 1,073,024 3,208,066 725,383 82,655

991,094 655,374 2,152,148 191,188 823,066

546,938 1,911,051 1,299,938 122,475 1,505,683

Civilian

1,400 0 81,673 4,582 0

55,580 3,276 0 28,450 0

3,213,879 1,207,877 138,073 235,451 71,801

90,797 736,293 3,244,053 217,129 51,541

517,465 340,823 708,269 102,032 883,264

385,260 469,657 1,275,163 56,573 646,125

Military

Federal retirement and disability benefits

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR DIRECT PAYMENTS FOR INDIVIDUALS FOR RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY, FOR SELECTED PROGRAMS, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued

516 8 246,926 1,498 0

38,538 3,970 85 9,518 8

650,028 689,217 225,301 345,508 46,132

80,065 473,048 1,792,057 112,226 49,884

512,612 348,643 727,652 88,392 382,951

273,359 823,095 808,095 51,868 606,850

71 27 176,320 632 0

19,150 886 5 1,911 17

208,751 150,634 82,459 97,243 10,130

27,601 193,114 604,430 26,841 13,531

186,981 101,510 279,847 25,109 155,286

66,272 280,702 252,880 15,107 240,276

Other benefit payments

Veteran benefits Payments for service connected disability

15 0 37,124 792 13,902

28,108 75 0 914 0

503,193 281,465 256,284 267,088 78,119

78,516 312,747 894,544 133,464 26,781

207,430 184,445 1,198,026 20,910 151,141

117,896 1,015,453 261,414 84,329 843,496

Other

FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

The Council of State Governments

79


80

Total

7,698,399 584,358 6,652,753 4,557,886 49,480,339

5,014,286 5,669,246 1,201,123 30,041,135 11,426,056

1,502,162 1,566,125 20,232,121 9,177,938 4,653,881

4,468,647 6,118,924 8,424,174 1,752,855 9,160,528 12,338,842

15,556,063 6,513,625 4,903,648 9,886,700

1,497,132 2,731,805 2,280,445 1,336,404 14,189,929

2,280,773 33,524,096 11,012,283 1,626,756 16,957,123

Alabama ................................. Alaska ..................................... Arizona ................................... Arkansas ................................ California ...............................

Colorado ................................ Connecticut ............................ Delaware ................................ Florida .................................... Georgia ...................................

Hawaii .................................... Idaho ....................................... Illinois ..................................... Indiana ................................... Iowa ........................................

Kansas .................................... Kentucky ................................ Louisiana ............................... Maine ...................................... Maryland ............................... Massachusetts .......................

Michigan ................................ Minnesota .............................. Mississippi ............................. Missouri .................................

Montana ................................. Nebraska ................................ Nevada .................................... New Hampshire ..................... New Jersey .............................

New Mexico ........................... New York ................................ North Carolina ...................... North Dakota ........................ Ohio ........................................

United States ......................... $446,119,217

State and outlying area

The Book of the States 2005 633,650 12,142,500 3,591,235 305,489 6,373,496

384,085 698,390 717,072 522,289 5,063,458

5,448,958 1,996,019 1,683,343 3,325,927

1,335,039 2,204,916 3,235,135 634,685 2,755,753 4,938,698

450,819 438,684 6,923,359 3,106,280 1,338,251

1,520,367 2,208,250 387,419 11,500,750 3,548,055

2,852,086 127,242 2,197,806 1,521,311 16,664,500

$152,257,431

Hospital insurance

556,879 9,825,117 2,639,175 253,532 5,009,228

313,748 598,448 635,267 376,023 4,274,332

4,743,578 1,541,519 1,119,165 2,526,733

1,141,003 1,583,113 2,017,915 479,611 2,300,714 3,202,728

423,292 350,348 5,068,300 2,267,768 1,220,975

1,247,380 1,737,929 310,849 11,272,865 2,667,286

1,980,767 84,892 1,979,853 1,115,207 15,027,966

$121,796,655

Supplementary medical insurance

Medicare benefits

312,940 2,148,032 1,181,077 53,967 1,150,361

102,316 154,411 226,739 75,130 705,856

937,786 324,123 699,398 643,286

249,665 503,658 984,835 111,699 498,987 383,172

113,640 143,135 1,271,205 621,070 228,054

348,390 220,508 85,156 2,327,127 1,394,750

860,614 46,702 610,809 463,347 3,699,038

$33,210,791

Excess earned income tax credits

152,919 3,833,165 1,415,478 45,738 1,711,892

83,929 151,580 357,438 123,240 2,647,862

2,341,564 987,962 231,240 694,558

437,057 563,854 340,861 145,978 585,681 2,423,590

148,654 203,316 2,920,617 751,983 429,789

712,278 899,723 144,072 1,447,107 971,854

372,690 162,558 417,638 364,976 7,413,498

$51,146,482

Unemployment compensation

183,505 1,676,509 645,418 36,703 880,175

68,951 89,302 112,673 39,887 338,821

783,076 227,113 335,074 567,586

140,387 486,231 685,267 124,070 256,924 253,771

156,191 76,580 1,052,739 483,697 149,244

203,312 164,854 47,791 987,926 782,411

466,124 65,728 25,837 304,340 1,808,412

$21,421,438

Food stamp payments

14,161 1,044,722 109,298 2,043 206,024

4,275 11,610 17,995 8,882 216,405

68,823 67,201 32,296 63,298

16,837 51,676 82,853 9,944 88,703 126,723

14,993 2,203 292,073 44,995 6,784

16,259 75,546 11,139 115,682 123,362

120,093 11,874 25,837 29,763 189,565

$4,331,165

Housing assistance

Table 2.5 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR DIRECT PAYMENTS OTHER THAN FOR RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY, FOR SELECTED PROGRAMS, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In thousands of dollars)

86,784 228,160 485,684 778,153 454,891

359,606 768,320 17,019 12,033 14,632

258,729 734,178 310,070 480,715

838,006 148,151 351,635 45,712 88,980 24,170

5,168 169,126 1,248,489 439,337 832,746

336,642 19,711 25,781 246,874 864,138

324,401 9,665 80,121 395,741 636,526

$16,575,381

Agricultural assistance

113,753 595,615 242,746 33,424 350,395

54,489 78,879 65,138 76,339 355,561

235,031 188,585 127,002 1,078,007

92,725 160,865 160,756 65,999 2,233,462 302,005

109,242 51,658 431,679 210,728 140,393

222,952 129,828 37,766 793,904 396,492

300,220 2,199 218,503 102,271 1,232,622

$17,177,037

Federal employees life and health insurance

Other

226,182 2,030,275 702,172 117,707 820,661

125,733 180,866 131,103 102,582 573,001

738,518 446,926 366,060 506,591

217,928 416,459 564,917 135,157 351,322 683,985

80,163 131,075 1,023,660 1,252,079 307,645

406,706 212,896 151,149 1,348,900 677,710

421,404 73,497 624,944 260,931 2,809,214

$28,202,838

FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES


9,420,394 8,513,362 3,047,545 7,281,930 602,193

2,369,503 12,216 7,442 91,511 49

14,507 1361 2,846,715 106,793 141,036

Virginia .................................. Washington ............................ West Virginia ......................... Wisconsin ............................... Wyoming ................................

Dist. of Columbia .................. American Samoa ................... Fed. States of Micronesia .... Guam ...................................... Marshall Islands ...................

No. Mariana Islands ............. Palau ....................................... Puerto Rico ............................ Virgin Islands ........................ Undistributed ........................ 0 0 566,063 1,490 0

423,154 0 0 807 0

2,799,634 2,239,920 1,188,887 2,334,670 198,193

335,667 3,516,172 9,580,312 599,026 271,780

2,036,611 1,388,207 9,542,247 691,340 1,755,239

0 0 995,566 10,937 0

347,535 0 0 609 0

2,267,647 1,932,925 887,751 1,904,546 146,692

268,683 2,141,843 6,702,239 441,391 188,127

1,329,325 1,215,750 7,260,372 491,851 1,369,360

Supplementary medical insurance

Medicare benefits Hospital insurance

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004.

1,640,858 8,921,671 29,116,948 2,051,372 827,907

South Dakota ......................... Tennessee ............................... Texas ....................................... Utah ........................................ Vermont .................................

Total

5,505,357 5,147,050 25,155,606 1,790,977 5,486,356

Oklahoma .............................. Oregon .................................... Pennsylvania ......................... Rhode Island ......................... South Carolina ......................

State or other jurisdiction

0 0 3,173 0 0

80,571 0 0 0 0

737,000 484,174 214,989 392,921 46,941

77,351 836,654 3,555,844 196,329 45,204

483,257 307,410 1,078,379 92,808 696,803

Excess earned income tax credits

0 0 287,006 28,071 0

125,151 0 0 0 0

797,241 2,231,437 202,009 1,099,803 51,612

31,444 719,854 2,746,180 275,547 117,316

342,231 1,247,969 3,452,275 249,382 507,008

Unemployment compensation

7,103 0 0 18,494 0

90,114 5604 0 53,437 0

366,234 394,383 216,065 233,463 24,054

50,515 721,795 1,880,852 102,205 37,629

362,458 380,967 785,459 68,801 443,356

Food stamp payments

0 0 115,686 21,693 0

63,793 0 0 3,195 0

74,843 44,320 16,611 24,865 1,506

5,473 104,548 131,009 7,269 4,196

28,868 21,972 277,290 24,782 35,312

Housing assistance

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR DIRECT PAYMENTS OTHER THAN FOR RETIREMENT AND DISABILITY, FOR SELECTED PROGRAMS, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued

13 0 19,440 4,687 0

55,589 0 0 140 0

236,233 275,210 22,888 567,586 42,170

653,926 159,696 1,451,790 39,931 47,026

290,983 140,645 285,411 6,088 155,835

Agricultural assistance

0 0 49,815 0 0

885,149 0 0 18,444 0

1,385,540 381,606 93,326 155,647 30,464

21,368 187,931 1,033,239 133,017 18,869

260,715 149,514 1,185,040 42,587 154,534

Federal employees life and health insurance

7,391 1361 809,966 8,720 141,036

298,447 6,612 7,442 14,878 49

756,023 529,386 206,020 568,428 60,560

196,431 533,178 2,035,485 256,656 97,760

370,910 294,596 1,289,134 123,337 368,910

Other

FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

The Council of State Governments

81


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

Table 2.6 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR GRANTS, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In thousands of dollars)

State and outlying area United States ....................

Total

Department of Agriculture

$441,037,633 $24,920,393

Appalachian Regional Commission

Department of Commerce

Corporation for National and Corporation Community for Public Service Broadcasting

Department of Defense

Department of Education

$72,207

$1,666,347

$589,103

$368,206

$3,158,563

$37,761,108

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

6,649,139 3,022,268 7,235,149 4,540,905 51,328,805

404,008 128,539 403,476 300,771 2,857,399

9,084 0 0 0 0

19,193 90,349 7,814 8,159 149,013

9,877 3,314 9,973 6,212 43,576

2,525 6,482 4,796 1,676 35,957

35,389 20,910 94,421 38,570 441,865

596,547 307,358 776,700 373,659 4,555,646

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

6,014,437 5,376,059 1,180,764 17,463,096 10,561,235

277,631 164,394 61,486 1,018,568 773,549

0 33 0 0 2,716

72,109 15,777 10,183 67,190 24,924

7,778 8,487 2,707 24,107 29,387

3,976 2,270 0 12,811 5,443

33,771 38,551 20,274 181,545 52,187

449,956 388,739 114,626 1,704,092 1,031,167

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

1,910,963 1,858,248 15,720,026 7,312,967 3,877,274

105,078 106,352 801,509 366,556 255,803

0 0 0 0 0

51,173 9,245 30,995 11,740 9,714

5,759 2,659 18,843 8,446 4,553

2,140 1,358 11,296 6,153 3,439

46,029 20,355 79,450 54,435 25,847

236,293 175,568 1,461,879 627,370 338,565

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

3,414,998 6,634,063 7,820,264 2,609,839 8,632,085

341,678 348,568 480,671 91,078 289,473

0 10,723 0 0 2,678

4,908 24,540 46,786 20,244 46,351

4,977 7,269 10,548 7,175 14,181

2,813 4,357 3,219 1,577 4,382

31,012 31,585 77,939 29,167 215,052

394,542 567,087 693,664 181,346 583,155

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

13,328,309 12,969,959 6,913,535 5,318,478 8,655,054

370,061 611,453 395,736 375,624 416,443

25 0 40 5,768 0

65,355 29,453 22,269 47,987 9,102

22,578 15,229 9,696 17,028 11,577

12,003 7,729 10,567 1,932 4,799

141,160 53,662 61,245 14,195 35,671

816,697 1,193,350 542,457 474,189 683,989

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

1,938,455 2,511,906 1,954,975 1,865,264 11,480,921

148,851 253,536 108,374 65,971 412,689

0 0 0 33 0

8,002 5,613 5,192 72,610 35,612

5,460 5,867 3,430 4,877 9,893

1,472 5,286 2,866 1,351 3,324

22,754 37,350 24,159 20,023 61,307

216,921 236,676 207,264 133,395 892,836

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

4,322,271 47,574,675 11,613,214 1,537,080 15,687,468

239,707 1,422,470 683,796 187,552 683,296

40 3,139 3,735 0 6,467

11,423 66,720 38,970 1,917 33,514

6,390 30,460 11,530 3,241 20,787

3,005 31,140 69,959 1,367 10,319

33,876 140,743 66,316 23,972 50,431

519,668 2,772,630 986,947 157,867 1,268,842

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

5,135,642 5,103,224 18,623,502 2,234,355 5,968,987

412,722 255,641 689,167 67,143 346,718

0 0 6,492 0 1,216

16,595 59,095 32,081 15,184 66,194

7,666 10,059 21,870 5,399 4,967

2,390 4,249 10,441 702 3,514

26,613 13,167 195,200 17,718 47,859

570,017 444,579 1,272,285 147,423 564,394

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

1,697,605 9,057,023 28,422,544 2,844,897 1,331,302

245,621 428,023 3,020,560 177,958 60,115

0 5,187 15 0 0

2,810 11,903 58,761 4,031 2,958

2,290 11,286 29,341 7,313 4,984

1,484 4,707 12,328 5,160 1,351

20,820 31,787 119,997 21,247 23,524

181,939 659,144 3,108,563 293,219 115,812

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

7,885,964 8,880,811 3,561,882 7,543,720 1,616,214

406,321 385,059 172,932 329,960 50,381

4,405 0 10,207 0 0

55,506 89,944 9,321 25,935 630

9,670 15,785 6,854 15,318 2,432

12,310 5,874 1,318 7,187 857

62,296 59,381 26,427 54,545 28685

813,027 715,357 283,147 635,654 118,777

Dist. of Columbia ............. American Samoa .............. Fed. States of Micronesia Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ..............

4,310,169 110,243 136,328 400,329 65,850

68,326 7,544 2,783 16,271 650

204 0 0 0 0

20,462 2,044 36 2,310 0

18,425 0 0 0 0

6,447 556 0 696 0

31,864 0 0 176 0

316,155 10,651 11,741 22,014 4733

No. Mariana Islands ........ Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ....................... Virgin Islands ................... Undistributed ...................

89,503 50,711 4,807,666 281,660 43,349

4,118 19 1,796,308 18,009 5,899

0 0 0 0 0

2,913 34 11,382 2,163 0

0 -15 7,345 227 0

0 0 3,317 585 -1,054

0 0 19,701 2,337 0

8,809 3,011 712,753 60,643 25,575

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004.

82

The Book of the States 2005


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR GRANTS, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Equal Department of Department of Institute Election Department Environmental Employment Health and Department of Housing of Museum Assistance of Protection Opportunity Human Homeland and Urban and Library State and outlying area Commission Energy Agency Commission Services Security Development Services United States ................... $649,500 $1,667,066 $3,996,749 $32,089 $253,240,716 $6,914,008 $32,054,913 $234,161

Department of the Interior $3,428,083

Alabama ........................... Alaska ............................... Arizona ............................. Arkansas .......................... California .........................

5,041 5,000 7,016 6,163 84,664

37,820 19,870 16,585 3,050 196,509

48,658 87,086 53,361 22,453 340,020

0 163 505 0 3,148

3,698,481 1,285,580 4,366,333 2,479,210 31,494,895

123,813 16,755 8,787 87,049 87,257

362,723 127,321 366,961 217,155 4,037,656

4,082 1,599 3,846 1,626 22,756

31,599 109,980 67,977 21,553 265,644

Colorado .......................... Connecticut ...................... Delaware .......................... Florida .............................. Georgia .............................

7,037 5,000 5,000 26,029 12,557

55,881 41,183 6,574 33,813 46,591

52,504 39,778 21,713 123,753 73,687

431 756 261 1,557 177

2,560,643 3,178,309 574,942 10,038,395 6,009,198

27,254 20,577 11,942 62,734 29,366

429,603 573,007 84,336 1,201,691 740,321

3,356 2,511 781 11,534 4,500

111,672 6,340 4,910 32,898 20,105

Hawaii .............................. Idaho ................................. Illinois ............................... Indiana ............................. Iowa ..................................

5,000 5,000 44,935 15,753 5,000

5,385 13,474 73,926 44,298 -59,462

28,341 51,085 154,123 74,604 76,735

139 317 1,595 566 883

853,200 885,948 8,916,589 4,279,953 2,208,551

3,933 8,520 59,461 60,672 26,270

158,943 77,348 1,626,957 505,268 225,021

1,839 1,436 11,742 3,303 5,280

23,650 52,659 19,137 13,821 14,479

Kansas .............................. Kentucky .......................... Louisiana ......................... Maine ................................ Maryland .........................

5,000 5,168 12,263 5,000 7,274

13,010 19,057 10,655 5,890 28,803

37,294 44,535 70,881 40,783 100,713

352 222 18 216 584

1,748,174 3,814,152 4,669,054 1,662,066 5,158,878

28,759 92,700 259,727 13,717 70,210

193,634 402,831 459,139 177,204 615,921

1,621 2,445 3,167 1,969 3,407

20,139 46,628 46,581 9,565 13,561

Massachusetts ................. Michigan .......................... Minnesota ........................ Mississippi ....................... Missouri ...........................

8,110 15,739 5,314 5,451 17,348

108,544 78,249 45,849 17,261 19,380

135,951 147,258 83,607 64,039 87,186

1,651 740 623 0 771

8,342,865 7,976,281 4,138,779 3,170,434 5,327,120

53,569 41,140 56,776 86,918 63,690

1,607,360 838,762 530,079 260,631 609,269

8,209 6,006 3,723 2,360 6,199

9,205 33,334 23,502 17,539 17,943

Montana ........................... Nebraska .......................... Nevada .............................. New Hampshire ............... New Jersey .......................

5,000 5,000 5,000 5,000 16,837

8,447 6,075 42,385 7,332 36,940

29,188 31,930 31,990 37,640 88,364

230 532 684 107 591

815,539 1,301,877 939,110 936,563 6,035,176

15,395 15,038 13,099 20,587 49,396

86,191 135,059 151,606 148,857 1,254,945

1,132 1,380 2,232 1,480 6,986

86,646 15,580 78,913 9,255 9,977

New Mexico ..................... New York .......................... North Carolina ................ North Dakota .................. Ohio ..................................

5,000 66,098 8,782 5,000 41,053

77,283 148,357 24,486 11,657 52,419

40,346 124,927 85,574 16,445 1,170,525

248 2,952 153 194 1,895

2,208,578 30,577,039 7,252,644 534,553 9,890,042

11,480 3,863,892 145,091 9,820 130,142

149,291 3,612,178 605,237 65,197 1,253,270

1,855 18,283 5,783 984 9,845

354,406 60,109 18,001 47,694 30,320

Oklahoma ........................ Oregon .............................. Pennsylvania ................... Rhode Island ................... South Carolina ................

5,000 6,027 34,240 5,000 6,820

12,192 15,732 8,745 5,242 18,321

57,505 62,239 139,724 32,868 44,243

383 537 2,000 176 802

2,756,334 2,849,298 11,559,081 1,312,470 3,516,650

50,991 40,464 80,574 10,553 24,353

346,978 303,404 1,425,325 248,756 305,716

3,252 3,052 12,906 847 3,074

25,743 157,700 78,750 7,050 11,866

South Dakota ................... Tennessee ......................... Texas ................................. Utah .................................. Vermont ...........................

5,000 8,478 23,476 8,818 5,000

3,403 21,842 69,384 18,195 4,662

25,877 64,344 302,301 40,288 27,758

165 350 1,015 337 55

585,747 5,941,863 14,859,122 1,387,184 741,667

14,900 103,005 368,172 18,574 6,391

93,665 457,746 1,625,539 117,521 86,263

703 3,750 14,114 2,013 742

98,759 27,733 61,355 146,603 7,340

Virginia ............................ Washington ...................... West Virginia ................... Wisconsin ......................... Wyoming ..........................

11,632 12,898 5,327 7,003 5,000

48,950 42,101 14,121 43,275 7,754

94,426 117,287 58,183 85,540 22,926

260 729 228 1,193 120

3,708,655 5,128,671 1,967,450 4,571,344 370,458

73,806 56,347 46,696 30,222 8,105

565,013 574,346 176,254 438,405 34,370

4,536 4,321 1,229 3,861 803

21,781 70,686 12,265 27,981 533,589

Dist. of Columbia ............ American Samoa ............. Fed. States of Micronesia Guam ................................ Marshall Islands .............

5,000 1,000 0 1,000 0

33,559 37 0 494 0

80,730 900 0 4,288 0

88 0 0 0 0

1,655,609 18,200 4,360 37,150 5,937

10,390 15,302 9,320 180,318 38

766,993 1,142 0 34,357 0

3,030 147 0 114 56

18,763 35,040 104,018 37,929 53,652

No. Mariana Islands ....... Palau ................................. Puerto Rico ...................... Virgin Islands .................. Undistributed ..................

0 0 3,151 1,000 0

3 0 1,215 260 0

76 0 14,894 3,274 0

0 0 383 11 0

12,060 4,522 865,042 52,692 0

10,409 -17 79,267 643 0

566 0 532,959 28,623 0

151 0 2,107 96 0

21,014 42,880 4,944 69,687 5,632

The Council of State Governments

83


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR GRANTS, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued

State and outlying area

Department of Justice

Department of Labor

National National Aeronautics Archives and and Space Records Administration Administration

National Endowment for the Arts

National Endowment for the Humanities

National Small Science Business Foundation Administration

United States ....................

$6,980,342

$9,165,139

$1,086,371

$6,400

$96,910

$97,349

$4,780,864

$64,448

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

83,318 50,536 128,106 61,956 750,126

123,297 64,042 142,798 81,013 1,036,076

52,482 2,134 18,346 1672 191,574

0 0 85 0 808

895 789 1,079 584 9,230

798 1567 1,389 693 9,290

40,041 29,630 92,351 10,336 737,954

1,370 116 955 14 3,579

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

107,550 96,317 35,304 368,406 210,310

108,934 115,612 23,034 298,735 168,984

38,168 9,198 1,704 33,211 17,446

0 161 0 232 114

2,274 1,147 610 1,415 2,446

1,231 1,003 683 1,317 1,183

247,438 43,260 25,412 143,743 106,160

256 300 0 1,258 384

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

51,267 38,520 243,025 97,773 69,244

58,149 55,074 437,049 124,667 75,209

17,144 3,621 13,784 5,292 10,769

40 18 169 20 44

1,123 700 3,425 846 663

719 472 5,262 1,413 709

32,261 13,709 236,290 65,501 32,535

81 497 1,044 255 2,702

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

59,809 113,227 131,723 43,625 158,090

78,978 135,609 135,998 62,901 228,762

2,856 6,284 14,348 1,979 92,862

0 163 10 20 276

686 1,337 1,173 1,084 2,440

1,123 574 1,446 1,674 2,291

27,048 25,309 35,146 21,338 117,966

639 861 100 1,821 641

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

126,299 153,672 100,166 73,844 127,556

201,475 340,384 138,511 96,583 151,414

52,296 12,094 5,914 18,936 12,656

286 63 0 0 43

3,359 1,665 5,597 755 2,313

5,342 1,899 1,309 608 1,546

371,202 172,568 69,581 18,043 52,434

592 1,010 803 1,967 2,445

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

52,061 56,136 82,258 66,052 168,418

40,595 37,571 62,876 33,994 216,631

7,576 2,707 3,281 13,324 15,163

9 0 0 12 324

816 863 667 746 1,207

463 1,323 754 924 2,329

31,954 26,296 15,527 17,118 116,958

163 153 424 111 1,783

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

78,645 525,413 135,720 34,647 187,819

74,136 691,704 270,971 27,973 313,830

6,846 39,950 9,398 4,845 43,062

20 299 426 17 20

1,010 15,952 1,318 664 1,650

738 11,262 2,011 774 2,868

33,264 412,218 117,098 13,132 81,033

1,186 5,858 854 242 4,337

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

103,629 81,846 213,521 41,859 110,785

87,186 156,304 440,141 32,273 124,535

20,512 4,797 17,229 9,431 14,569

5 9 165 84 247

786 1,134 2,804 886 1,207

715 1,812 3,540 1,004 1,057

26,936 58,876 206,300 23,951 32,180

2,877 2,892 4,488 366 874

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

45,700 112,841 425,380 55,022 36,529

32,854 150,579 542,199 76,764 29,677

1186 8,307 73,103 5,336 1,058

15 199 89 0 0

641 925 2,684 1,021 1,036

460 1,319 3,068 688 666

14,133 48,300 171,972 34,231 10,477

2,672 857 815 120 290

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

206,915 168,519 67,793 110,204 29,029

265,118 312,213 59,659 194,061 21,488

57,439 8,144 40,288 10,711 1103

525 44 0 384 30

1,486 2,006 644 1,054 627

5,100 942 656 3,048 453

147,992 119,556 10,084 110,322 8,076

5,595 551 1,590 1,192 0

Dist. of Columbia ............. American Samoa .............. Fed. States of Micronesia Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ..............

196,754 7,676 0 11,284 0

124,630 1,042 4,071 25,276 784

18,847 0 0 0 0

928 0 0 0 0

3,701 247 0 244 0

1,977 211 0 268 0

97,592 0 0 188 0

279 150 0 0 0

No. Mariana Islands ........ Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ....................... Virgin Islands ................... Undistributed ...................

7,285 0 64,131 16,342 0

2,189 261 219,585 8,686 0

0 0 4,477 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

351 0 629 270 0

259 0 832 267 0

0 0 27,346 769 0

0 0 0 0 0

84

The Book of the States 2005


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR GRANTS, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued

State and outlying area

Social Security Department Administration of State

State Justice Institute

Tennessee Valley Authority (a)

Department of Transportation

Department of the Treasury (b)

Department of Veterans Affairs

Other

United States ....................

$9,902

$211,224

$2,033

$329,367

$45,935,691

$802,527

$633,699

$82,155

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

0 0 0 0 566

1,053 500 3,949 822 24,269

10 1 15 2 2

77,524 0 0 0 0

870,005 661,885 648,492 814,125 3,883,572

899 124 3,326 214 4,119

8,466 218 4,715 1,540 46,603

143 419 991 628 15,034

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

0 0 0 0 3,985

3,825 2,451 618 5,015 2

26 0 0 2 5,161

0 0 0 0 1,176,012

1,397,297 613,045 173,890 2,050,900 929

214 251 57 6,701 11,192

12,061 6,429 32 8,927 1052

1,559 1,172 32 2,514

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

0 0 6,347 0 0

1165 844 9,600 3,530 2,818

13 5 45 1 1

0 0 331 0 0

221,412 320,332 1,428,946 933,456 529,384

91 130 2,280 558 254

0 11,248 18,980 5,612 11,996

241 1,755 1,013 1,107 268

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

0 0 0 0 0

2,053 1,436 2,472 1,897 6,420

1 1 0 6 64

0 26,389 0 0 0

400,183 889,595 645,427 208,115 858,299

344 362 326 121 2,473

12,806 10,872 7,314 18,123 4,753

560 448 471 138 2,126

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

0 301 0 0 0

11,934 5,282 3,499 874 3,909

15 216 6 45 1

0 0 0 18,130 0

809,027 1,217,385 640,696 515,248 968,599

1,269 1,004 182 264 510

31,463 13,377 15,993 11,715 20,376

3,406 654 1,018 92 764

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

0 0 0 0 0

2,402 1,070 548 839 2,613

8 0 1 0 26

0 0 0 0 0

346,597 317,650 165,852 261,526 1,987,675

133 730 410 65 2,657

14,117 10,393 5,924 3,814 49,781

334 214 148 1657 482

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

0 1,209 0 0 0

1,854 21,755 4,518 353 6,319

94 168 0 0 0

0 0 1,557 0 0

457,204 2,867,255 1,054,977 383,314 1,376,562

331 11,531 1,330 30 604

3,558 20,764 3,903 3,156 12,168

789 8,198 2,131 473 4,028

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

0 0 0 0 0

1,723 3,602 9,144 752 3,109

0 2 1 18 0

0 0 0 0 0

566,868 562,035 2,132,196 238,634 687,721

148 1,547 806 180 1,041

28,858 2,461 23,467 7,191 24,946

1,021 666 820 1,175 9

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

0 0 0 0 446

457 1,473 9,996 1,194 794

13 529 3 0 24

0 200,171 0 0 0

314,244 743,066 3,478,708 419,272 156,865

48 396 7,686 63 19

1,722 5,409 28,382 2,337 2,953

279 1,503 4,506 392 1,846

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

0 0 0 579 0

3,787 5,034 323 3,305 121

497 1 69 22 0

104 0 0 0 0

1,284,302 942,580 570,494 809,712 368,440

1,535 655 87 154 6

11,143 41,072 17,426 20,102 1,956

1,923 710 810 1,471 0

Dist. of Columbia ............. American Samoa .............. Fed. States of Micronesia Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ..............

455 0 0 0 0

19,651 0 0 0 0

99 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

422,396 8,356 0 25,952 0

384,632 (c) 0 0 0 0

922 0 0 0 0

1,243 0 0 0 0

No. Mariana Islands ........ Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ....................... Virgin Islands ................... Undistributed ...................

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 242 26 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0

19,303 0 75,555 15,050 3

0 0 358,705 0 0

0 0 966 0 0

0 0 429 0 7,294

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004. (a) Payments in lieu of taxes have been categorized as “grants”. (b) Includes distributions to state and local governments of seized cash and other assets.

0 0

(c) Also includes Treasury payments to recipients that are separate from the government of the District of Columbia and Washington Metropolitan Transit Authority (WMATA).

The Council of State Governments

85


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

Table 2.7 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In thousands of dollars) Department of Defense

State and outlying area

Total

Total

Army

Navy

Air Force

Nondefense agencies Army Corps of Engineers

Other defense

Total

Department Department of of Agriculture Commerce

United States ..................... $327,413,076 $201,229,510 $50,272,843 $51,762,828 $54,293,150 $3,496,299 $41,404,390 $126,183,567 $4,656,951 $1,475,976 Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

7,067,435 1,680,115 8,556,995 864,051 37,049,547

5,510,444 1,236,673 7,564,129 577,668 26,078,513

2,311,201 611,746 2,801,557 217,883 3,718,533

304,057 76,486 1,800,541 22,863 6,325,069

404,808 418,210 1,233,586 179,603 12,608,835

99,161 13,074 21,460 75,378 282,167

2,391,217 117,156 1,706,985 81,941 3,143,909

1,556,991 443,443 992,866 286,383 10,971,034

35,212 46,063 53,953 32,812 508,018

3,271 24,948 9,191 30 24,244

Colorado ............................ Connecticut ....................... Delaware ............................ Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

5,141,688 8,484,307 244,804 10,898,964 5,242,532

2,471,002 7,894,812 164,300 7,998,672 3,323,844

718,022 1,421,670 55,986 1,935,114 1,011,648

84,849 3,953,048 7,629 2,269,277 358,273

1,258,623 2,136,470 61,605 2,982,907 1,661,424

16,170 6,265 6,269 163,925 80,515

393,339 377,360 32,810 647,450 211,984

2,670,685 589,495 80,504 2,900,312 1,918,687

148,786 4,428 3,849 47,177 57,470

31,767 954 670 17,207 2,980

Hawaii ............................... Idaho ................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

1,978,401 1,531,332 5,728,862 3,301,567 1,109,249

1,750,209 207,157 2,513,729 2,566,740 658,236

372,361 73,879 909,369 1,226,966 189,190

674,317 14,814 323,311 458,237 143,823

251,294 83,379 573,847 190,740 264,392

6,253 13,453 137,433 42,017 12,079

445,984 21,632 569,768 648,760 48,750

228,192 1,324,176 3,215,133 734,826 451,013

21,561 93,349 105,359 27,370 54,903

11,451 222 3,823 4,392 542

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana ........................... Maine ................................ Maryland ...........................

2,020,127 5,119,069 3,194,691 1,311,784 16,215,876

1,219,202 3,223,397 1,951,317 1,175,637 7,171,165

435,053 518,436 316,363 112,525 2,271,715

61,244 308,396 1,070,027 919,226 2,686,472

633,109 153,958 65,106 12,535 978,644

11,233 74,003 253,353 12,354 53,365

78,564 2,168,603 246,468 118,997 1,180,968

800,925 1,895,672 1,243,373 136,147 9,044,711

97,980 16,880 200,913 2,796 73,828

675 471 11,085 1,249 350,494

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ........................... Minnesota .......................... Mississippi ......................... Missouri .............................

8,357,478 3,884,004 2,405,899 2,625,647 7,991,663

6,364,760 2,494,162 1,541,939 2,126,372 6,243,784

2,012,160 1,842,338 715,100 114,565 715,969

2,314,462 140,474 478,084 1,543,480 3,337,122

1,609,067 165,175 126,629 262,034 1,785,015

64,495 28,695 29,927 106,588 162,379

364,576 317,481 192,199 99,705 243,298

1,992,718 1,389,842 863,960 499,275 1,747,879

6,785 94,289 155,280 32,511 220,983

32,983 4,066 2,664 23,374 5,909

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................. New Jersey ........................

497,284 608,205 1,472,258 738,325 5,460,981

189,961 312,153 386,682 531,084 3,873,075

46,878 77,867 104,652 101,371 1,279,535

1,839 6,094 76,816 135,024 1,520,112

104,127 194,642 156,651 217,002 210,271

14,311 22,059 30,425 4,502 272,028

22,806 11,491 18,138 73,185 591,130

307,323 296,052 1,085,576 207,241 1,587,906

104,236 72,344 11,265 2,825 9,651

270 2,199 1,244 6,969 6,972

New Mexico ....................... New York ........................... North Carolina .................. North Dakota .................... Ohio ...................................

5,818,972 7,758,292 3,794,455 397,542 6,547,578

955,369 4,252,848 1,988,214 262,126 4,271,188

421,447 1,210,678 835,000 53,110 987,191

56,038 1,527,962 498,944 3017 533,560

368,229 722,612 267,131 134,817 1,690,489

56,724 130,203 73,036 42,055 63,523

52,931 661,392 313,603 29,127 996,425

4,863,603 3,505,444 1,806,240 135,415 2,276,390

32,119 37,365 52,772 21,670 62,571

1,229 6,172 23,896 174 5,208

Oklahoma .......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... South Carolina ..................

2,487,848 1,198,111 8,136,659 659,084 3,614,372

1,470,524 474,353 5,606,604 498,783 1,486,512

434,628 259,515 2,320,422 24,318 408,689

97,278 55,257 1,731,010 431,056 623,916

686,739 25,434 296,908 1,916 167,049

37,550 88,477 101,357 20,057 43,308

214,329 45,670 1,156,907 21,436 243,549

1,017,323 723,758 2,530,056 160,301 2,127,861

10,268 181,040 80,283 19 8,305

13,070 17,922 43,798 6,301 12,675

South Dakota ..................... Tennessee ........................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont .............................

380,964 7,521,940 29,823,365 2,664,844 566,070

196,303 2,160,985 20,820,951 1,871,074 454,931

55,934 396,132 4,392,132 255,571 344,560

18,134 49,889 3,645,721 166,799 43,404

49,832 1,337,322 10,015,943 1,264,625 9,728

7,597 61,881 221,876 5,614 7,878

64,806 315,761 2,545,280 178,465 49,361

184,661 5,360,954 9,001,414 793,770 111,139

17,563 78,918 471,753 34,180 1420

879 595 35,699 222 2,800

Virginia .............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia ..................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

30,838,710 6,628,532 664,915 2,007,637 345,985

19,493,045 3,196,024 184,828 1,243,698 71,775

4,561,069 543,333 36,219 707,299 7,219

6,650,151 825,691 21,076 225,023 184

2,866,077 1,323,888 12,256 47,426 35,833

119,928 125,529 79,681 18,941 2609

5,295,819 377,582 35,596 245,008 25,930

11,345,665 3,432,508 480,087 763,939 274,210

99,074 129,306 24,958 113,691 14,399

377,897 30,452 233 3,649 122

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ............... Fed. States of Micronesia ... Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ................

11,375,903 27,687 1,022 525,782 114,768

1,753,101 8113 0 509,121 114,439

408,820 603 0 574 110,274

858,670 0 0 351,410 4164

79,779 84 0 118,348 0

24,674 1597 0 21492 0

381,158 5829 0 17,297 0

9,622,802 19,575 1,022 16,661 329

243,264 19,087 6 72 0

64,227 0 878 322 329

No. Mariana Islands .......... Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ........................ Virgin Islands .................... Undistributed (a) ...............

8,425 658 561,295 25,742 32,132,759

7,351 658 402,964 4,091 18,148,718

6,373 0 47,220 699 3,203,645

972 0 92,235 56 1,835,739

0 0 3,664 0 1,783,331

0 658 24,705 11 0

6 0 253,140 3,324 11,326,003

1,074 0 158,331 21,652 13,984,041

0 0 4,712 73 574,826

0 0 267 79 240,564

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004.

86

The Book of the States 2005


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Nondefense agencies

State and outlying area United States .................

Department Department Department Department Environmental General of Health Department of Housing Department Department Department of of Protection Services and Human of Homeland and Urban of the of of Education Energy Agency Administration Services Security Develop. Interior Justice Labor $1,011,180

15,525,853

Alabama ........................ Alaska ............................ Arizona .......................... Arkansas ....................... California ......................

$1,020,944 $21,226,221 95 131 4,011 83 52,002

1,139 2 78,902 1,742 2,307,060

1,553 0 376 70 34,466

205,154 42,801 76,089 14,367 1,038,599

7,057,404 $5,435,637 63,794 31,303 49,352 39,642 272,259

41,817 48,998 90,704 139 215,455

$977,316 $4,268,665 $4,240,018 5,896 33 1,265 1,022 126,432

18,934 73,601 129,390 6,055 243,449

42,190 688 104,221 4,662 192,575

$1,545,139 22,891 12,048 17,694 6,979 119,132

Colorado ........................ Connecticut ................... Delaware ........................ Florida ........................... Georgia ..........................

5476 32,623 86 617 30,630

1,060,956 1,380 0 13,230 11,718

34,431 1,853 11,525 5,023 25,524

369,571 51,131 9,672 387,314 500,753

23,299 17,522 304 27,122 489,713

27,910 47,024 268 65,349 74,914

81,100 4,082 76 2,874 69,454

194,156 6,493 2,069 52,280 23,249

9,849 6,574 1,041 59,644 14,731

7,431 16,300 1,351 34,525 50,632

Hawaii ........................... Idaho ............................. Illinois ............................ Indiana .......................... Iowa ...............................

9,950 93 18,862 -188 38,493

0 977,189 862,084 4,719 24,385

0 40 13,441 3,322 99

39,908 27,167 311,485 50,788 35,534

7,760 3,082 88,313 56,208 69,167

21,358 19,486 12,297 7,716 13,504

222 1,112 96,588 -17,952 100

30,023 45,221 10,025 6,843 3,642

2,213 3,474 37,916 53,619 812

13,722 963 23,014 16,617 12,369

Kansas ........................... Kentucky ....................... Louisiana ....................... Maine ............................ Maryland .......................

113 198 9 158 242,340

194 76,022 167,228 266 180,043

15,015 14,279 377 602 83,302

63,283 75,708 94,457 9,540 1,152,410

5,331 5,507 9,327 11,665 2,798,531

9,242 7,335 27,086 5,622 254,293

964 555 6,392 94 74,500

11,467 19,195 28,365 10,948 198,807

11,851 18,223 105,026 217 246,343

6,765 38,341 19,911 11,659 86,409

Massachusetts ................ Michigan ....................... Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

11,608 383 59,118 0 959

2,632 3465 3,230 0 484,289

90,055 36,711 2,688 452 18,908

272,670 471,064 70,435 53,561 287,944

74,293 55,175 61,916 7,857 64,076

33,569 25,269 7,180 68,126 3,555

4,535 2,752 627 1,665 -6,835

36,782 9,176 16,948 8,131 17,509

17,642 35,174 19,286 1,992 17,037

34,406 22,091 7,007 29,724 31,139

Montana ........................ Nebraska ....................... Nevada ........................... New Hampshire ............. New Jersey ....................

137 292 93 2,675 2,314

16,738 473 794,526 75 109,123

165 123 3,858 1,445 35,507

17,517 22,077 20,951 62,772 214,482

23,422 15,042 8,925 3,892 49,799

2,049 88 711 4,303 33,666

483 968 1,239 441 844

59,500 6,065 52,679 3,387 43,752

2,870 678 1,117 9,828 40,125

9,369 1,059 43,764 0 14,603

New Mexico ................... New York ....................... North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ...............................

87 28,263 36,876 98 5,389

4,229,723 722,685 147,569 10,973 543,879

984 20,209 60,236 472 96,689

30,633 582,062 124,221 10,604 321,294

39,202 146,003 280,313 6,468 82,436

16,285 80,278 35,307 3,934 57,099

421 31,863 1,400 3,442 -2,704

115,027 181,061 15,706 10,602 14,996

156,727 73,849 131,989 10,539 20,936

14,446 73,009 14,738 5,074 29,486

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ........................... Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

2,310 4,254 17,329 5,807 478

5,162 2,049 474,656 1,195 1,590,464

6,478 4,522 82,508 7,049 663

478,932 142,876 234,678 13,111 49,376

8,257 11,055 72,851 8,092 34,026

1,362 10,362 20,558 1,546 13,178

2,718 438 102,199 77 386

44,162 79,868 72,377 10,405 5,759

38,410 5,200 49,593 1,511 12,286

32,078 18,113 43,993 1,373 3,206

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas .............................. Utah ............................... Vermont .........................

5,449 74 33,367 86 27

6,607 2,451,542 347,475 21,114 2,167

225 141 10,800 334 807

13,022 86,224 1,342,145 77,801 20,221

33,442 45,784 133,522 22,218 927

428 23,961 864,525 3,014 2,225

99 2,355 16,022 1,721 0

51,414 11,429 52,624 66,500 2,406

3,481 63,973 111,250 4,880 655

540 5,236 131,365 26,898 5,323

Virginia .......................... Washington ................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming .......................

121,265 4,957 2,112 1,991 0

835,705 2,382,441 50,017 4,086 6,094

195,609 9,486 1 13,203 0

3,152,596 216,895 37,110 62,419 5,812

373,233 75,977 6,193 48,192 2,274

1,434,208 104,459 7,451 18,123 1,880

35,085 -1,281 14,876 528 146

843,673 67,038 13,970 18,733 36,591

366,880 5,665 97,248 57,295 737

136,952 11,789 18,322 5,171 0

Dist. of Columbia ........... American Samoa ........... Fed. States of Micronesia Guam ............................. Marshall Islands ............

221,047 12 0 8 0

41,109 0 0 0 0

32,684 0 0 0 0

2,248,022 210 0 6,372 0

293,726 0 0 196 0

1,293,943 0 0 1,541 0

285,901 0 0 0 0

328,471 71 1 794 0

866,850 0 0 100 0

191,258 0 0 0 0

No. Mariana Islands ...... Palau .............................. Puerto Rico .................... Virgin Islands ................ Undistributed (a) ...........

0 0 132 14 16,151

0 0 0 0 166,695

0 0 0 0 32,875

637 0 22,496 3,248 193,631

0 0 3,360 0 896,060

27 0 19,172 0 251,740

0 0 231 0 7,267

112 0 1,317 7,410 848,005

0 0 1,407 101 1,096,836

0 0 20,925 9 44,188

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

87


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR PROCUREMENT CONTRACTS, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Nondefense agencies—continued

State and outlying area

NASA

United States ................. $11,799,660

National Archives National and Records Science Admin. Foundation $112,499

Postal Service

Small Bus. Admin.

Social Security Admin.

Dept. of State

$62,280 $13,658,032 $47,950 $668,247 $2,456,575

Dept. of Transportation $5,623,172

Dept. of the Treasury

Dept. of Veterans Affairs

$2,483,251 $13,832,633

Other nondefense (b) $7,037,966

Alabama ........................ Alaska ............................ Arizona .......................... Arkansas ....................... California ......................

478,397 10,091 65,560 0 3,102,994

0 374 0 0 1,118

0 0 0 0 830

168,501 34,084 212,767 110,086 1,467,896

0 0 221 29 452

3,993 634 391 0 26,841

51,221 55,664 2,275 29 19,979

25,250 46,865 34,042 1,793 362,624

1,882 141 645 890 337,999

72,779 14,680 58,176 65,808 484,587

312,931 293 3,641 144 32,023

Colorado ........................ Connecticut ................... Delaware ........................ Florida ........................... Georgia ..........................

212,638 101,785 1,197 765,756 13,995

0 0 0 0 21,906

7,340 39 0 0 0

242,057 187,229 38,381 707,013 370,358

213 0 0 0 47

5,129 309 80 408 3,743

23,775 2,039 331 154,651 6,532

43,511 9,222 0 195,702 26,667

16,224 1,018 215 15,770 11,654

63,909 94,564 8,859 316,254 72,531

61,158 2,926 527 32,394 39,487

Hawaii ........................... Idaho ............................. Illinois ............................ Indiana .......................... Iowa ...............................

1,448 327 4,780 24,950 980

0 0 144 0 579

0 0 4,483 0 0

44,233 48,762 698,104 261,760 157,393

0 0 1,139 0 0

537 276 10,812 692 342

60 0 18,455 1,516 1,487

4,243 6,042 213,534 50,165 12,445

17 40,061 28,422 2,961 6,360

19,311 55,972 577,896 154,851 17,701

174 1340 74,158 24,477 176

Kansas ........................... Kentucky ....................... Louisiana ....................... Maine ............................ Maryland .......................

398 871 309,222 0 1,046,010

3,140 0 0 0 33,965

4 0 0 0 1,584

147,062 167,311 176,071 73,953 292,786

0 0 0 65 1,378

0 2,226 258 0 334,372

39 6,216 1,550 5 179,960

36,087 3,364 29,682 1,042 960,161

7,100 6,866 372 0 211,752

383,581 244,118 46,136 6,009 171,199

634 1,191,986 9,909 257 70,604

Massachusetts ................ Michigan ....................... Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

134,751 5,245 7,341 121,808 3,684

4,423 2,046 0 0 3,867

962 0 0 0 43

386,904 488,610 278,207 95,937 324,324

0 1000 35 0 100

3,244 5,987 250 222 14,920

14,143 661 2312 0 4218

384,350 7,857 59,160 14,780 25,564

137,205 42,873 1,401 0 4,385

298,081 73,119 83,949 32,116 219,686

10,695 2,828 24,927 7,021 1,615

Montana ........................ Nebraska ....................... Nevada ........................... New Hampshire ............. New Jersey ....................

1,601 149 534 12,622 41,674

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 41

45,985 97,507 81,639 71,060 542,000

39 0 0 0 0

157 0 62 2,887 6,622

468 31 84 13,594 6,265

11,721 16,384 38,295 1,935 290,484

35 0 779 320 24,064

10,329 49,123 23,564 5,809 89,196

231 11,450 248 401 26,724

New Mexico ................... New York ....................... North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ...............................

74,213 23,121 19,582 0 198,369

0 2,369 0 0 416

0 0 63 0 0

68,366 1,033,568 346,622 37,224 556,298

260 0 96 307 -20

600 10,522 1,387 1,390 1,442

413 6,633 126,909 85 2,584

27,071 151,332 54,384 1,467 40,221

92 51,730 1,676 4,262 8,073

55,160 220,217 74,713 6,360 215,605

548 23,133 243,186 270 16,123

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ........................... Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

1,930 6,132 22,381 1069 1400

0 0 1,211 0 0

0 0 69 0 0

147,211 140,467 672,467 57,440 138,963

0 53 0 0 0

934 19 16,007 27 573

366 3,570 897 -244 135,685

171,772 40,338 67,514 636 54,145

3,489 174 32,969 30,406 8

42,668 54,671 261,913 14,274 45,328

5,384 637 159,806 207 20,957

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas .............................. Utah ............................... Vermont .........................

117 13,794 3,718,251 418,304 554

0 0 3,824 0 0

0 0 182 0 0

40,200 257,380 882,308 88,548 37,555

0 0 -3 0 0

58 211 6,695 138 14

447 12,931 291,872 96 95

611 43,173 138,937 5,644 25,644

49 529,914 62,658 8,195 0

7,729 1,718,950 299,272 29,686 7,961

2,300 1,718,578 47,873 -15,810 338

Virginia .......................... Washington ................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming .......................

520,598 5,340 21,007 11,144 225

5,895 883 0 0 0

8,328 0 0 2019 0

353,184 252,272 87,821 249,346 23,174

518 249 0 0 0

45,403 1,830 441 618 14

384,844 993 1027 571 0

843,750 52,330 4,166 9,505 26,516

509,108 4,012 51,327 1,242 7,937

406,579 71,941 29,980 131,764 7,549

295,282 5,473 11,825 10,648 140,739

Dist. of Columbia ........... American Samoa ........... Fed. States of Micronesia Guam ............................. Marshall Islands ............

77,177 0 0 0 0

9,984 0 0 0 0

28,525 0 0 0 0

102,053 31,943 165 0 0 0 2,132 0 0 0

20,049 0 0 3 0

454,206 0 137 0 0

492,291 0 0 4,997 0

530,745 0 0 0 0

253,572 30 0 125 0

1,511,756 0 0 0 0

No. Mariana Islands ...... Palau .............................. Puerto Rico .................... Virgin Islands ................ Undistributed (a) ...........

0 0 198 0 173,944

0 0 0 0 16,354

0 0 0 0 7,765

0 0 141 0 134,338

0 0 38 0 464,901

0 0 1,051 6,337 446,369

0 0 19 0 239,300

0 0 21,693 37 7,229,999

100 0 447 12 892,404

198 0 60,762 4,331 0

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004. (a) For all agencies, this line includes contract awards under $25,000 and procurement purchases made using government-issued purchase cards. (b) Includes Fiscal Year 2000 procurement data for the Tennessee Valley Authority, which did not provide Fiscal Year 2003 procurement data. (c) Data shown for U.S. Postal Service represent actual outlays for con-

88

The Book of the States 2005

0 0 0 0 9,829

tractual commitments, while all other amounts shown represent the value of contract actions, and do not reflect federal government expenditures. Nonpostal data generally involve only current year contract actions; however multipleyear obligations may be reflected for contract actions of less than 3 years duration. Negative amounts represent the deobligation of prior year contracts.


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

Table 2.8 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR SALARIES AND WAGES, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In thousands of dollars) Department of Defense Military services Army State and outlying area

Total

Nondefense civilian (a)

Total

Other defense civilian (b)

Total

Active military

Inactive military

Civilian

Total

Active military

United States ..................... $210,677,312 $128,987,168 $81,690,144 $4,685,214 $77,004,930 $46,908,385 $7,445,634 $22,650,911 $26,495,515 $14,854,048 Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ............................ California ..........................

3,223,864 1,616,563 3,334,607 1,339,120 20,611,019

1,719,815 696,309 2,046,790 900,000 11,358,683

1,504,049 920,254 1,287,817 439,120 9,252,336

69,988 12,704 50,919 3,896 393,332

1,434,061 907,550 1,236,898 435,224 8,859,004

498,341 704,441 906,305 208,689 6,022,465

225,193 38,444 47,304 120,764 427,102

710,527 164,665 283,289 105,771 2,409,437

1,006,277 340,966 358,802 170,134 780,584

228,684 240,426 209,912 13,870 309,510

Colorado ............................ Connecticut ....................... Delaware ............................ Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

4,329,051 1,516,299 489,112 9,745,937 8,014,506

2,578,677 1,075,432 227,879 5,475,321 3,769,827

1,750,374 440,867 261,233 4,270,616 4,244,679

145,855 44,632 2,315 135,351 100,250

1,604,519 396,235 258,918 4,135,265 4,144,429

1,175,498 267,750 155,480 2,820,796 2,778,047

120,072 59,413 50,905 271,596 285,047

308,949 69,072 52,533 1,042,873 1,081,325

754,940 57,528 21,360 387,482 2,471,507

625,898 1,786 76 132,430 1,992,112

Hawaii ................................ Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana ............................... Iowa ...................................

2,863,720 834,221 6,552,599 2,338,400 1,129,283

451,926 593,327 4,735,374 1,625,452 948,011

2,411,794 240,894 1,817,225 712,948 181,272

40,549 1,600 76,263 159,545 2,856

2,371,245 239,294 1,740,962 553,403 178,416

1,641,229 161,792 1,091,846 54,852 25,235

90,861 33,369 197,920 249,000 107,077

639,155 44,133 451,196 249,551 46,104

781,478 46,237 398,970 238,581 102,784

607,430 1,558 24,890 19,988 9,690

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana ........................... Maine ................................. Maryland ...........................

2,108,436 3,112,416 2,647,755 888,479 10,331,302

1,172,918 1,439,196 1,500,520 458,198 7,211,521

935,518 1,673,220 1,147,235 430,281 3,119,781

14,464 42,423 18,017 13,663 116,172

921,054 1,630,797 1,129,218 416,618 3,003,609

645,807 1,340,534 700,111 129,171 1,347,423

108,773 131,267 188,182 36,186 207,465

166,474 158,996 240,925 251,261 1,448,721

695,232 1,556,227 585,573 38,064 886,549

504,032 1,314,268 362,710 9,310 271,244

Massachusetts ................... Michigan ............................ Minnesota .......................... Mississippi ......................... Missouri .............................

3,446,374 3,417,861 2,119,854 1,969,926 3,831,586

2,828,609 2,862,717 1,824,740 858,688 2,651,681

617,765 555,144 295,114 1,111,238 1,179,905

77,102 99,578 15,424 11,385 107,008

540,663 455,566 279,690 1,099,853 1,072,897

142,442 66,157 37,150 623,491 594,538

167,658 128,865 167,017 137,479 252,281

230,563 260,544 75,523 338,883 226,078

191,778 304,823 144,897 219,526 702,922

9,196 16,796 10,374 15,010 355,604

Montana ............................ Nebraska ............................ Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey .........................

844,555 1,191,971 1,222,032 571,199 4,158,589

619,112 663,459 742,585 465,860 3,079,122

225,443 528,512 479,447 105,339 1,079,467

1,606 14,005 5,835 10,669 49,834

223,837 514,507 473,612 94,670 1,029,633

126,564 336,338 367,871 42,776 310,622

54,901 51,643 28,716 22,259 140,687

42,372 126,526 77,025 29,259 578,324

44,616 80,439 34,873 34,385 546,308

950 4,598 4,332 418 42,902

New Mexico ....................... New York ........................... North Carolina .................. North Dakota .................... Ohio ...................................

1,925,949 8,535,231 6,540,669 717,096 5,361,854

1,142,627 7,112,671 2,362,775 348,246 3,552,132

783,322 1,422,560 4,177,894 368,850 1,809,722

20,965 86,197 75,715 2,754 464,447

762,357 1,336,363 4,102,179 366,096 1,345,275

447,699 724,114 3,423,535 256,094 324,637

49,935 281,706 184,264 50,958 268,822

264,723 330,543 494,380 59,044 751,816

139,744 885,951 1,923,012 39,731 188,383

9,424 521,170 1,622,638 798 17,594

Oklahoma .......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... South Carolina ..................

3,352,613 1,780,924 6,362,506 816,835 2,862,699

1,381,121 1,512,121 4,818,552 355,789 1,023,057

1,971,492 268,803 1,543,954 461,046 1,839,642

59,056 1,990 375,999 4,118 52,419

1,912,436 266,813 1,167,955 456,928 1,787,223

941,437 47,626 160,219 164,637 1,351,581

138,224 108,071 303,675 54,316 128,601

832,775 111,116 704,061 237,975 307,041

684,254 142,859 470,148 33,608 572,147

486,438 8,360 42,598 3,116 396,302

South Dakota ..................... Tennessee ........................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont .............................

673,239 3,357,249 13,939,234 2,046,807 360,045

479,991 2,792,888 7,770,534 1,054,269 279,744

193,248 564,361 6,168,700 992,538 80,301

1,780 38,250 187,620 48,059 2,385

191,468 526,111 5,981,080 944,479 77,916

122,951 134,000 4,379,236 219,790 7,589

28,677 181,982 432,101 136,150 53,694

39,840 210,129 1,169,743 588,539 16,633

40,337 252,839 3,197,301 178,556 32,738

2,394 12,426 2,426,718 11,552 418

Virginia .............................. Washington ........................ West Virginia ..................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

14,755,627 5,758,246 1,288,892 1,785,055 510,231

4,841,084 2,518,586 1,128,610 1,513,750 308,179

9,914,543 1,340,273 3,239,660 44,234 160,282 1,088 271,305 5,482 202,052 1,247

8,574,270 3,195,426 159,194 265,823 200,805

5,748,496 2,069,947 30,341 37,737 127,186

224,620 212,151 72,743 145,547 36,780

2,601,154 913,328 56,110 82,539 36,839

1,896,677 1,043,179 106,175 136,291 20,772

976,904 762,698 7,828 10,640 228

Dist. of Columbia .............. American Samoa ............... Micronesia ......................... Guam ................................. Marshall Islands ...............

14,760,002 6,954 0 314,526 0

13,279,708 4,942 0 35,616 0

1,480,294 2,012 0 278,910 0

19,801 0 0 4,668 0

1,460,493 2,012 0 274,242 0

571,045 0 0 205,366 0

65,355 1,966 0 19,103 0

824,093 46 0 49,773 0

375,728 2,012 0 9,789 0

180,652 0 0 1,520 0

No. Mariana Islands ......... Palau .................................. Puerto Rico ........................ Virgin Islands .................... Undistributed ....................

5,898 0 968,180 55,119 2,034,995

5,699 0 701,282 46,450 2,034,995

199 0 266,898 8,669 0

0 0 9,427 0 0

199 0 257,471 8,669 0

0 0 87,917 1,444 0

199 0 112,769 5,393 0

0 0 56,785 1,832 0

199 0 132,654 6,639 0

0 0 11,400 228 0

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

89


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR SALARIES AND WAGES, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Department of Defense—continued Military services—continued Army—continued State and outlying area United States ..............

Inactive military

Civilian

$4,739,067 $6,902,400

Navy Total $27,928,356

Active military

Air Force Inactive military

$18,720,609 $582,308

Civilian

Total

$8,625,439 $22,581,059

Active military $13,333,728

Inactive military

Civilian

$2,124,259 $7,123,072

Alabama ..................... Alaska ......................... Arizona ....................... Arkansas ..................... California ...................

180,441 23,611 25,902 81,733 250,774

597,152 76,929 122,988 74,531 220,300

38,171 7,123 210,911 5,859 6,602,340

28,924 5,451 184,582 3,805 4,842,388

7,959 927 7,684 1,753 78,410

1,288 745 18,645 301 1,681,542

389,613 559,461 667,185 259,231 1,476,080

240,733 458,564 511,811 191,014 870,567

36,793 13,906 13,718 37,278 507,595

112,087 86,991 141,656 30,939 501,557

Colorado ..................... Connecticut ................ Delaware ..................... Florida ........................ Georgia .......................

54,777 44,352 14,535 158,671 168,443

74,265 11,390 6,749 96,381 310,952

54,694 311,137 2,635 2,154,677 507,563

42,697 258,994 1,618 1,579,606 328,944

9,639 4,385 1,017 41,928 22,988

2,358 47,758 0 533,143 155,631

794,885 27,570 234,923 1,593,106 1,165,359

506,903 6,970 153,786 1,108,760 456,991

55,656 10,676 35,353 70,997 93,626

232,326 9,924 45,784 413,349 614,742

Hawaii ......................... Idaho ........................... Illinois ......................... Indiana ........................ Iowa ............................

46,345 28,524 150,457 172,885 69,428

127,703 16,155 223,623 45,708 23,666

1,199,257 8,126 843,420 185,384 10,165

779,570 3,366 752,775 19,513 6,097

4,682 1,941 22,205 6,057 3,909

415,005 2,819 68,440 159,814 159

390,510 184,931 498,572 129,438 65,467

254,229 156,868 314,181 15,351 9,448

39,834 2,904 25,258 70,058 33,740

96,447 25,159 159,133 44,029 22,279

Kansas ........................ Kentucky .................... Louisiana .................... Maine .......................... Maryland ....................

71,289 99,451 106,608 20,733 142,132

119,911 142,508 116,255 8,021 473,173

8,081 26,177 161,893 350,968 1,516,714

6,439 11,249 89,882 111,040 637,187

1,618 4,044 17,095 7,893 4,701

24 10,884 54,916 232,035 874,826

217,741 48,393 381,752 27,586 600,346

135,336 15,017 247,519 8,621 438,992

35,866 27,772 64,479 7,560 60,632

46,539 5,604 69,754 11,205 100,722

Massachusetts ............ Michigan ..................... Minnesota ................... Mississippi .................. Missouri ......................

101,399 84,038 92,617 96,982 184,232

81,183 203,989 41,906 107,534 163,086

45,064 34,601 21,653 420,652 119,060

27,754 27,494 12,156 301,592 82,799

3,438 6,201 8,832 4,706 26,562

13,872 906 665 114,354 9,699

303,821 116,142 113,140 459,675 250,915

105,492 21,867 14,620 306,889 156,135

62,821 38,626 65,568 35,791 41,487

135,508 55,649 32,952 116,995 53,293

Montana ..................... Nebraska ..................... Nevada ........................ New Hampshire ......... New Jersey ..................

30,407 29,020 21,100 17,222 104,068

13,259 46,821 9,441 16,745 399,338

1,812 31,851 61,256 36,098 174,124

794 28,277 46,365 32,242 58,182

1,018 2,983 2,700 1,343 3,712

0 591 12,191 2,513 112,230

177,409 402,217 377,483 24,187 309,201

124,820 303,463 317,174 10,116 209,538

23,476 19,640 4,916 4,070 32,907

29,113 79,114 55,393 10,001 66,756

New Mexico ................ New York .................... North Carolina ........... North Dakota ............. Ohio ............................

29,131 159,712 136,727 27,614 132,627

101,189 205,069 163,647 11,319 38,162

14,852 156,342 1,721,437 1,551 46,642

10,002 128,822 1,427,420 732 26,332

2,842 21,016 11,627 722 17,267

2,008 6,504 282,390 97 3,043

607,761 294,070 457,730 324,814 1,110,250

428,273 74,122 373,477 254,564 280,711

17,962 100,978 35,910 22,622 118,928

161,526 118,970 48,343 47,628 710,611

Oklahoma ................... Oregon ........................ Pennsylvania .............. Rhode Island .............. South Carolina ...........

79,373 60,711 198,456 24,132 104,413

118,443 73,788 229,094 6,360 71,432

89,490 25,536 519,270 377,207 759,969

79,537 18,809 84,219 149,949 585,592

5,934 5,990 24,870 5,388 8,410

4,019 737 410,181 221,870 165,967

1,138,692 98,418 178,537 46,113 455,107

375,462 20,457 33,402 11,572 369,687

52,917 41,370 80,349 24,796 15,778

710,313 36,591 64,786 9,745 69,642

South Dakota .............. Tennessee .................... Texas ........................... Utah ............................ Vermont ......................

25,846 117,184 284,986 101,987 24,611

12,097 123,299 485,597 65,017 7,709

1,023 147,912 498,014 13,807 1,552

283 92,811 400,086 9,356 1,257

709 11,984 39,569 3,066 236

31 43,117 58,359 1,385 59

150,108 125,360 2,285,765 752,116 43,626

120,274 28,763 1,552,432 198,882 5,914

2,122 52,814 107,546 31,097 28,847

27,712 43,783 625,787 522,137 8,865

Virginia ....................... Washington ................. West Virginia .............. Wisconsin ................... Wyoming ....................

151,356 110,345 62,790 80,709 15,219

768,417 170,136 35,557 44,942 5,275

5,578,503 1,703,414 17,507 16,428 521

3,971,178 1,018,873 12,657 8,926 35

34,370 22,492 2,149 7,128 486

1,572,955 662,049 2,701 374 0

1,099,090 448,833 35,512 113,104 179,562

800,414 288,376 9,856 18,171 126,923

38,894 79,314 7,804 57,710 21,075

259,782 81,143 17,852 37,223 31,564

Dist. of Columbia ....... American Samoa ........ Micronesia .................. Guam .......................... Marshall Islands ........

23,241 1,966 0 8,011 0

171,835 46 0 258 0

833,227 0 0 158,857 0

185,893 0 0 127,912 0

41,136 0 0 0 0

606,198 0 0 30,945 0

251,538 0 0 105,596 0

204,500 0 0 75,934 0

978 0 0 11,092 0

46,060 0 0 18,570 0

No. Mariana Islands .. Palau ........................... Puerto Rico ................. Virgin Islands ............. Undistributed .............

199 0 100,966 4,579 0

0 0 20,228 1,832 0

0 0 93,726 103 0

0 0 68,043 103 0

0 0 2,587 0 0

0 0 23,096 0 0

0 0 31,091 1,927 0

0 0 8,474 1,113 0

0 0 9,216 814 0

0 0 13,401 0 0

See footnotes at end of table.

90

The Book of the States 2005


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR SALARIES AND WAGES, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Nondefense agencies Federal Department Department Department Department Environmental Deposit General of Health Department of of of Protection Insurance Services and Human of Homeland Commerce Education Energy Agency CorporationAdministration Services Security

Total (a)

Department of Agriculture

United States ...............

$128,987,168

$5,567,267

$2,400,051

$357,078

$1,303,605

$1,424,863

$498,446

$948,612

$4,616,737

$4,611,354

Alabama ...................... Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ Arkansas ...................... California ....................

1,719,815 696,309 2,046,790 900,000 11,358,683

69,553 53,866 102,838 113,840 463,403

5,694 29,973 9,254 2,725 56,448

79 0 0 0 13,903

0 96 15,560 2,129 43,917

2,753 2,200 262 0 72,229

2,684 0 1,682 1,803 30,019

3,556 3,065 4,061 1,332 71,252

3,813 34,435 204,877 27,315 89,287

22,494 23,827 147,619 9,693 594,626

Colorado ...................... Connecticut ................. Delaware ...................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................

2,578,677 1,075,432 227,879 5,475,321 3,769,827

193,756 10,144 12,703 49,190 156,539

87,486 3,502 436 49,190 12,667

5,154 0 0 371 15,223

60,111 145 0 103 6,542

56,035 619 0 6,864 84,635

2,628 2,238 868 5,243 16,198

23,664 937 231 6,980 47,292

33,575 1,939 712 15,808 491,474

64,029 24,147 1,331 330,088 151,263

Hawaii .......................... Idaho ............................ Illinois .......................... Indiana ......................... Iowa .............................

451,926 593,327 4,735,374 1,625,452 948,011

26,991 149,337 96,915 49,785 117,560

15,456 6,362 12,850 65,449 3,981

0 0 13,852 104 66

302 31,982 28,340 0 787

538 1,836 95,662 110 385

0 0 24,228 3,113 5,518

3,766 1,329 50,760 3,037 1,257

1,273 2,836 56,327 2,884 1,340

46,788 10,308 138,789 26,806 8,049

Kansas ......................... Kentucky ..................... Louisiana ..................... Maine ........................... Maryland .....................

1,172,918 1,439,196 1,500,520 458,198 7,211,521

61,085 65,370 168,939 16,757 242,809

9,369 6,016 9,022 4,542 751,052

0 0 0 0 0

0 1,120 6,828 0 132,758

41,188 200 946 0 7,027

6,458 3,872 4,062 0 2,267

1,638 1,248 2,996 455 14,548

11,997 1,062 12,543 1,412 2,478,296

9,695 26,393 44,919 21,834 106,453

Massachusetts ............. Michigan ...................... Minnesota .................... Mississippi ................... Missouri .......................

2,828,609 2,862,717 1,824,740 858,688 2,651,681

25,761 73,211 110,406 110,223 260,202

32,761 16,433 7,161 12,989 29,432

7,053 0 337 0 7,310

1,390 0 62 0 7,908

57,544 25,795 6,466 2,133 677

17,917 3,096 4,665 2,277 15,565

19,420 6,250 3,059 993 57,836

41,279 8,811 24,033 1,350 32,455

95,247 90,854 46,194 10,142 49,065

Montana ...................... Nebraska ...................... Nevada ......................... New Hampshire .......... New Jersey ...................

619,112 663,459 742,585 465,860 3,079,122

170,487 87,252 24,489 20,015 31,518

6,679 4,883 6,500 1,856 14,966

0 0 0 0 0

9,733 1,272 32,799 0 1,525

2,528 87 12,283 0 18,000

1,091 3,143 0 2,192 4,400

1,272 1,195 1,892 1,156 14,317

50,951 4,397 3,715 585 12,014

17,777 24,741 40,348 6,994 108,033

New Mexico ................. New York ..................... North Carolina ............ North Dakota .............. Ohio .............................

1,142,627 7,112,671 2,362,775 348,246 3,552,132

88,807 64,561 112,326 48,984 55,542

4,299 21,176 27,856 3,720 8,782

0 6,664 0 0 2,084

72,909 12,792 0 4,068 13,748

150 58,391 95,818 0 42,345

1,495 17,296 3,633 2,721 2,709

2,630 47,773 3,275 1,007 8,428

139,727 67,309 69,739 22,191 42,078

40,576 302,384 66,400 12,030 52,724

Oklahoma .................... Oregon ......................... Pennsylvania ............... Rhode Island ............... South Carolina ............

1,381,121 1,512,121 4,818,552 355,789 1,023,057

58,502 254,061 97,718 2,719 54,986

19,253 18,896 13,437 2,892 16,256

0 0 7,993 0 0

9,134 102,972 30,131 0 37,856

4,195 9,244 67,993 5,846 0

3,975 1,530 5,561 0 1,682

2,889 2,618 42,650 670 1,717

71,322 11,407 68,747 628 1,424

15,674 33,238 84,936 16,372 23,025

South Dakota ............... Tennessee ..................... Texas ............................ Utah ............................. Vermont .......................

479,991 2,792,888 7,770,534 1,054,269 279,744

51,799 70,900 213,608 101,107 17,401

5,193 7,368 34,584 7,739 2,032

0 174 9,286 0 0

12,085 52,523 12,899 1,442 0

67 495 67,339 129 0

2,064 11,783 69,364 3,373 0

980 2,769 69,553 1,800 297

59,105 7,488 53,186 2,932 648

4,107 30,390 692,368 23,474 49,961

Virginia ........................ Washington .................. West Virginia ............... Wisconsin .................... Wyoming .....................

4,841,084 2,518,586 1,128,610 1,513,750 308,179

142,655 128,793 43,663 101,142 47,551

564,402 79,858 2,593 6,679 3,290

0 5,521 0 0 0

1,432 169,648 21,836 55 4,140

106,208 41,012 2,027 144 0

742 3,918 1,114 5,592 0

119,940 31,758 2,124 1,813 894

3,211 50,771 29,404 3,970 4,726

186,863 106,618 10,446 17,315 2,518

Dist. of Columbia ........ American Samoa ......... Micronesia ................... Guam ........................... Marshall Islands .........

13,279,708 4,942 0 35,616 0

589,840 368 0 3,371 0

269,324 951 0 1,887 0

261,501 0 0 0 0

358,526 0 0 0 0

420,806 0 0 133 0

191,955 0 0 0 0

250,145 0 0 0 0

245,179 0 0 0 0

471,942 91 0 7,167 0

No. Mariana Islands ... Palau ............................ Puerto Rico .................. Virgin Islands .............. Undistributed ..............

5,699 0 701,282 46,450 2,034,995

409 0 31,867 823 0

0 0 2,450 0 0

0 0 403 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

156 0 3,285 78 0

0 0 712 0 0

0 0 2,024 64 0

47 0 8,703 0 0

1,195 0 51,275 9,719 0

State and outlying area

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

91


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR SALARIES AND WAGES, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Nondefense agencies—continued

State and outlying area

Department of Housing Department Department Department and Urban of the of of Development Interior Justice (c) Labor

National Archives and Records Administration

National United States Science Postal Foundation Service

Small Business Administration

United States .........

$783,920

$4,017,547

$1,575,282

$134,106

$108,563

$50,428,121

$264,956

Alabama ................ Alaska .................... Arizona .................. Arkansas ................ California ..............

6,073 2,641 8,572 4,177 48,351

7,953 137,156 228,842 16,548 378,412

73,586 12,125 131,197 42,707 614,877

9,370 907 3,821 3,281 63,456

218,154 0 271 0 191,932

54 176 0 1,014 5,598

0 123 0 0 0

622,138 125,844 785,576 406,459 5,419,757

3,365 1,108 1,603 3,128 32,584

Colorado ................ Connecticut ........... Delaware ................ Florida ................... Georgia ..................

26,249 4,909 359 19,471 31,474

456,373 3,133 2,246 75,678 61,521

141,219 51,969 10,944 403,133 188,139

28,738 4,896 720 30,129 36,996

786 81 0 146,922 0

1,872 0 0 0 3,822

0 0 0 0 1,367,435

893,721 691,285 141,711 2,610,430 11,902

9,101 1,896 415 4,996 12,879

Hawaii .................... Idaho ...................... Illinois .................... Indiana ................... Iowa .......................

1,727 948 35,507 5,861 2,493

25,361 116,359 13,755 13,396 6,879

28,408 16,745 229,022 72,483 19,838

1,716 2,147 54,900 6,605 2,081

0 0 79 57 0

0 0 1,834 0 837

0 0 151 0 0

163,316 180,038 2,577,535 966,469 581,126

1,436 904 5,347 1,607 1,891

Kansas ................... Kentucky ............... Louisiana ............... Maine ..................... Maryland ...............

12,572 5,161 7,622 496 9,250

19,688 18,426 62,117 10,617 43,970

66,268 117,551 124,941 9,646 289,024

3,980 27,652 6,710 1,819 6,363

0 0 769 0 255,381

1,572 0 0 0 55,802

0 0 0 0 0

542,983 617,744 650,090 273,048 1,081,022

1,318 2,199 1,874 1,254 2,236

Massachusetts ....... Michigan ................ Minnesota .............. Mississippi ............. Missouri .................

17,461 12,640 7,294 3,962 8,685

65,418 24,241 43,261 23,416 47,506

99,296 115,618 93,446 45,373 104,026

32,341 7,165 3,975 3,065 27,712

144 110 0 22,966 72

4,205 1,202 0 0 25,981

0 0 0 0 0

1,428,526 1,804,043 1,027,194 354,217 1,197,467

3,285 2,774 1,938 1,099 5,703

Montana ................ Nebraska ................ Nevada ................... New Hampshire .... New Jersey .............

618 3,089 2,183 3,099 9,364

107,722 24,214 104,292 4,810 19,335

13,214 16,736 39,441 11,888 218,687

1,582 2,447 2,061 2,969 13,246

0 0 0 98 156

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

169,785 360,015 301,426 262,367 2,001,169

1,006 1,234 1,503 995 2,488

New Mexico ........... New York ............... North Carolina ...... North Dakota ........ Ohio .......................

2,520 40,171 8,282 483 18,138

251,090 50,979 31,515 42,597 17,046

35,991 383,431 119,585 6,883 104,347

2,384 49,092 5,321 1,194 29,979

4,712 2,605 0 0 153,958

74 1,905 0 0 2,529

0 0 0 0 0

252,420 3,816,136 1,279,796 137,439 2,053,960

1,353 17,057 2,131 1,251 3,664

Oklahoma .............. Oregon ................... Pennsylvania ......... Rhode Island ......... South Carolina ......

10,092 4,377 30,967 2,118 5,695

53,407 182,121 66,149 3,303 10,742

86,210 54,800 317,280 10,105 77,793

3,483 2,992 68,210 1,684 2,895

0 96 0 0 0

0 0 2,310 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

543,532 518,632 2,482,878 212,079 513,078

1,395 1,849 5,943 1,182 1,517

South Dakota ......... Tennessee ............... Texas ...................... Utah ....................... Vermont .................

437 11,115 43,916 1,800 407

71,909 34,802 59,338 105,962 3,166

18,232 81,646 595,907 29,699 7,690

841 7,071 53,163 8,312 460

0 0 260,384 679 0

0 0 5,062 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

148,425 950,296 3,257,652 326,937 138,660

878 1,772 23,493 1,611 1,173

Virginia .................. Washington ............ West Virginia ......... Wisconsin .............. Wyoming ...............

7,468 15,761 2,001 5,545 382

266,993 135,678 42,191 33,340 90,296

740,024 75,932 212,892 51,096 8,471

35,668 19,122 32,292 7,120 1,014

203,424 0 2,286 105 0

0 1,429 0 0 0

108,289 0 0 0 0

1,304,025 931,438 324,252 920,635 85,564

2,209 3,957 1,429 1,995 943

Dist. of Columbia .. American Samoa ... Micronesia ............. Guam ..................... Marshall Islands ...

263,531 0 0 63 0

284,833 1,058 0 1,465 0

1,717,154 0 0 5,560 0

450,795 0 0 49 0

109,055 0 0 0 0

16,828 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

376,798 610 0 7,873 0

71,033 0 0 1,474 0

0 0 6,343

764 0 8,185

1,527 0 71,225

225 0 2,438

0 0 0

0 0 0

0 0 0

732 0 224,346

0 0 2,439

No. Mariana Islands Palau ...................... Puerto Rico ............

See footnotes at end of table.

92

The Book of the States 2005

$8,380,544 $1,178,654

National Aeronautics and Space Administration


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR SALARIES AND WAGES, BY AGENCY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 — Continued Nondefense agencies—continued State and outlying area

Social Security Administration

Department of State

Department of Transportation

Department of the Treasury

Department of Veterans Affairs

All other nondefense (d)

United States ....................

$3,682,084

$970,644

$6,501,692

$7,652,362

$11,966,240

$7,884,784

Alabama ........................... Alaska ............................... Arizona ............................. Arkansas ........................... California .........................

131,542 2,613 30,429 24,746 349,442

462 59 1,108 73 11,539

33,756 130,177 64,334 25,099 559,316

36,063 8,303 45,897 16,479 840,256

208,627 22,555 244,195 193,546 1,109,829

220,949 898 14,373 2,780 105,521

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ...................... Delaware ........................... Florida .............................. Georgia .............................

38,523 22,093 3,876 129,484 90,063

344 1,038 0 22,686 943

157,576 26,716 3,446 327,495 284,475

113,447 50,993 11,503 209,596 350,627

149,196 117,925 35,002 749,800 291,940

33,701 4,349 587 25,273 55,902

Hawaii ............................... Idaho ................................. Illinois ............................... Indiana .............................. Iowa ..................................

5,725 6,716 186,283 42,401 18,283

1,179 0 4,016 0 0

41,674 14,560 274,270 127,527 24,093

12,456 9,182 200,314 62,813 18,432

29,716 41,260 491,309 163,027 128,884

3,050 308 135,569 9,676 1,541

Kansas .............................. Kentucky .......................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................ Maryland ..........................

18,188 41,645 45,417 10,151 771,280

111 161 3,858 85 2,886

115,938 45,199 38,916 19,632 60,521

105,569 236,420 45,419 10,456 428,475

132,127 150,904 204,101 53,447 183,327

5,150 65,764 9,192 601 251,895

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

66,633 74,009 26,216 32,075 134,089

3,067 615 198 122 40

153,864 88,582 125,411 19,124 128,118

229,538 153,663 60,319 17,439 214,671

301,536 290,393 217,816 165,682 279,003

32,761 13,533 9,765 19,249 11,606

Montana ........................... Nebraska ........................... Nevada .............................. New Hampshire ............... New Jersey ........................

6,776 9,800 10,187 7,683 58,369

111 130 0 4,112 962

16,779 18,825 42,655 79,844 196,614

8,179 19,567 24,583 14,301 103,540

31,403 78,305 89,681 33,276 175,898

1,049 1,367 1,829 680 9,916

New Mexico ...................... New York .......................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ..................................

40,332 251,207 56,693 5,747 83,917

487 20,602 3,273 0 0

81,295 327,755 58,298 14,816 171,205

13,585 582,749 63,696 6,814 192,922

102,648 840,838 280,536 35,941 445,307

2,558 84,169 13,066 360 25,761

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon .............................. Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

26,306 25,011 221,016 8,982 32,119

130 0 3,383 717 10,102

284,617 32,165 107,388 11,491 30,935

42,008 38,941 466,619 12,324 19,347

139,584 173,578 526,541 47,298 149,025

2,459 2,586 85,337 923 3,914

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas ................................. Utah .................................. Vermont ............................

5,338 54,236 157,825 10,564 3,534

0 0 15,437 0 0

9,065 132,035 486,882 82,962 9,686

6,461 265,360 623,524 258,640 5,668

82,310 322,511 837,713 81,975 37,589

696 741,781 63,145 2,932 293

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin ......................... Wyoming ..........................

116,378 76,680 25,465 36,990 2,149

5,868 2,964 0 0 0

270,303 220,396 17,476 32,641 9,602

126,372 83,874 176,196 44,478 5,422

249,915 258,115 173,107 222,442 40,710

93,131 14,264 2,871 6,932 301

Dist. of Columbia ............. American Samoa .............. Micronesia ........................ Guam ................................ Marshall Islands ..............

19,434 195 0 606 0

847,776 0 0 0 0

826,028 1,420 0 5,330 0

916,569 0 0 0 0

418,497 56 0 477 0

3,787,855 0 0 20 0

No. Mariana Islands ........ Palau ................................. Puerto Rico ....................... Virgin Islands ................... Undistributed ...................

226 0 25,603 794 0

0 0 0 0 0

257 0 31,660 1,448 2,267

148 0 41,765 380 2,267

0 0 135,270 547 0

12 0 24,020 18 1,876,546

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004. Note: Department of Defense data represent salaries, wages and compensation, such as housing allowances; distributions by state are based on duty station. State detail for all other federal government agencies are estimates, based on place of employment. (a) The “undistributed” amount includes the salary and wages data for the Federal Bureau of Investigation and for the Federal Judiciary that could not be geo-

graphically allocated. (b) The “undistributed” amount represents Defense Logistics Agency salaries and wages that could not be geographically allocated. (c) The “undistributed” amount includes the salaries and wages of the Federal Bureau of Investigation that could not be geographically allocated. (d) The “undistributed” amount includes the salaries and wages for the Federal Judiciary that could not be geographically allocated.

The Council of State Governments

93


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

Table 2.9 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT INSURANCE AND LOAN PROGRAMS, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In thousands of dollars) Guaranteed loans by volume of coverage provided-continued

Direct loans by volume of assistance provided Department of Agriculture State and outlying area

Total

Other Commodity loans— agriculture Federal direct price supports loans student loans

United States ...........

$35,561,844

$7,424,474

Alabama ................... Alaska ....................... Arizona ..................... Arkansas .................. California .................

814,893 28,556 557,182 502,259 3,040,961

210,348 0 3,562 344,019 738,193

64,522 10,086 41,107 99,850 179,387

501,604 11,169 509,431 54,786 2,025,121

Colorado .................. Connecticut .............. Delaware .................. Florida ...................... Georgia .....................

571,813 130,100 62,917 667,449 1,119,692

129,898 0 1,240 74,685 76,611

48,190 15,873 17,399 100,014 108,561

375,753 100,508 44,267 457,756 914,310

Hawaii ...................... Idaho ......................... Illinois ....................... Indiana ..................... Iowa ..........................

16,982 388,031 1,540,228 908,471 1,577,021

0 24,279 197,597 102,513 678,747

15,583 55,758 96,028 73,200 98,209

Kansas ...................... Kentucky .................. Louisiana ................. Maine ........................ Maryland .................

305,951 369,455 327,312 81,700 496,445

29,916 77,002 96,150 235 4,598

Massachusetts ......... Michigan .................. Minnesota ................ Mississippi ............... Missouri ...................

937,618 2,298,559 1,275,958 1,635,426 545,612

Montana ................... Nebraska .................. Nevada ...................... New Hampshire ....... New Jersey ...............

Other direct loans

Total

Veterans housing Mortgage Federal Family guaranteed and insurance Education insured loansfor homes Loan program VA home loans

$3,693,221 $22,072,946 $1,371,203 $226,971,244 $148,635,920 $28,132,568

$13,970,796

1,304,122 580,258 5,694,506 922,720 13,683,394

338,397 20,033 1,108,555 231,635 2,685,029

238,813 116,541 649,781 109,887 777,942

11,042,703 2,278,092 494,359 11,374,305 8,498,424

8,265,739 1,350,065 330,726 7,130,454 6,164,994

454,331 342,422 42,841 1,639,424 651,466

539,051 47,957 61,825 1,085,084 572,185

668 307,645 1,230,438 694,007 798,339

731 532,553 349 1,326,360 16,165 10,548,520 38,751 5,308,387 1,725 1,279,497

173,292 966,258 7,384,714 3,895,542 487,324

79,167 35,052 1,104,335 735,852 265,606

39,807 106,697 353,554 230,930 73,129

65,110 105,864 107,826 47,921 22,331

182,142 174,075 48,437 31,135 459,153

28,783 1,648,464 12,514 2,755,396 74,899 2,224,178 2,409 542,212 10,363 10,194,402

953,999 1,316,827 1,140,932 226,625 8,010,181

260,995 300,613 625,694 154,578 350,953

134,670 148,075 126,308 35,642 645,790

29 146,048 625,792 1,439,923 87,827

39,264 104,472 90,230 98,045 80,614

891,098 2,044,682 551,654 48,557 346,382

7,227 3,357 8,282 48,901 30,788

3,359,981 6,059,314 3,933,153 1,780,123 4,433,078

1,978,898 4,456,011 2,035,015 871,509 2,802,405

788,067 475,679 532,881 299,524 769,883

60,831 232,832 147,394 114,926 269,089

134,122 493,970 145,086 51,042 419,606

22,914 262,550 0 0 1,493

38,158 69,096 15,855 22,283 24,984

71,642 154,190 123,996 28,587 375,201

1,408 8,134 5,235 172 17,928

655,231 1,372,541 3,483,275 801,383 7,105,158

304,989 715,514 2,752,213 386,505 5,521,907

101,372 230,618 56,936 197,049 410,995

41,089 151,644 340,317 36,847 152,359

New Mexico ............. New York .................. North Carolina ........ North Dakota .......... Ohio ..........................

171,206 2,261,796 813,259 191,399 1,931,715

4,412 15,203 267,656 129,928 57,716

30,894 95,326 153,240 58,882 105,238

134,773 1,765,762 386,117 0 1,724,026

1,126 385,506 6,246 2,589 44,735

1,629,743 8,037,240 6,076,858 763,874 7,492,837

1,083,455 4,588,514 4,081,969 184,459 5,130,597

99,494 2,453,473 626,199 128,893 1,012,830

166,101 121,713 709,329 32,008 418,633

Oklahoma ................ Oregon ...................... Pennsylvania ........... Rhode Island ........... South Carolina ........

228,663 807,278 200,403 160,104 335,958

11,171 7,110 4,943 0 9,222

105,298 56,991 95,191 7,204 80,831

95,129 742,177 93,564 150,658 241,182

17,065 1,001 6,705 2,242 4,723

2,259,713 2,768,331 6,566,838 806,905 1,904,262

1,178,590 1,982,398 3,009,531 500,393 829,158

424,912 220,664 2,506,153 204,948 355,452

173,229 215,303 300,580 14,996 199,854

South Dakota ........... Tennessee ................. Texas ......................... Utah .......................... Vermont ...................

186,856 459,651 1,417,147 404,125 43,457

113,930 65,322 848,950 354,273 8

63,805 94,092 258,656 43,837 27,685

3,310 240,279 244,949 4,523 15,136

5,811 621,218 59,959 4,656,184 64,592 19,066,300 1,492 5,979,980 628 361,285

196,561 3,212,642 13,645,985 4,913,712 54,867

142,908 590,352 1,914,234 223,926 143,476

39,305 327,754 1,322,029 173,724 12,826

Virginia .................... Washington .............. West Virginia ........... Wisconsin ................. Wyoming ..................

1,071,611 793,967 564,520 483,404 20,205

13,289 39,284 1,287 100,319 4,281

79,030 82,859 84,921 114,730 14,766

965,394 659,327 468,827 263,063 13

13,898 12,498 9,485 5,290 1,145

8,213,473 6,375,787 450,454 2,282,275 389,650

5,521,634 4,288,115 228,462 1,013,077 143,726

398,142 397,453 60,775 464,200 57,824

1,131,455 702,671 36,585 177,729 32,709

Dist. of Columbia .... American Samoa ..... Fed. States of Micronesia Guam ........................ Marshall Islands .....

235,823 2,346 4,408 153,834 1,366

0 0 0 0 0

750 0 3,809 249 1,366

231,966 0 0 2,081 0

3,107 2,346 599 151,504 0

701,490 3,000 0 19,309 0

258,485 0 0 502 0

340,873 0 0 0 0

5,226 0 0 1,122 0

No. Mariana Islands Palau ......................... Puerto Rico .............. Virgin Islands .......... Undistributed ..........

11,416 560 154,533 6,415 0

0 0 0 0 0

1,231 560 71,753 4,207 0

0 0 82,122 1,833 0

10,184 0 659 376 0

263 0 1,259,165 168,259 0

0 0 780,415 1,036 0

0 0 75,407 0 0

0 0 14,730 190 0

94

The Book of the States 2005

38,419 2,268,600 7,301 956,583 3,082 8,142,602 3,604 1,691,596 98,259 22,026,079 17,972 13,718 12 34,993 20,209


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

FEDERAL GOVERNMENT INSURANCE AND LOAN PROGRAMS, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003—Continued

Insurance programs by volume of coverage provided

Guaranteed loans by volume of coverage provided

State and outlying area United States ..........

Mortgage U.S.D.A. insurance— guaranteed condominiums loans

Small business loans

Other guaranteed loans

Total

Flood insurance

Crop insurance

$10,661,966 $11,921,282 $12,957,211 $691,501 $704,823,389 $661,793,029 $40,064,741

Foreign Investment Life Insurance Other Insurance for Veterans insurance $612,228

$1,880,191

$473,200

5,175,116 363,242 4,399,680 1,194,980 44,636,332

235,500 592 135,606 452,550 2,980,851

0 0 0 0 28,669

25,583 2,560 45,002 16,071 197,117

4,971 6,732 9,160 2,401 58,176

341,775 276,786 25,708 599,937 342,034

0 3,104,579 2,478,078 0 5,017,234 4,912,159 0 2,857,587 2,809,725 0 282,991,752 280,053,010 0 12,139,219 11,398,805

568,785 71,809 42,084 2,688,462 665,365

0 0 0 26,967 0

30,137 30,300 5,778 172,717 41,860

27,578 2,967 0 50,596 33,190

34,613 128,323 370,231 201,959 302,763

34,644 83,754 488,849 167,677 126,322

0 0 0 0 0

6,100,973 1,342,278 8,151,621 4,218,900 4,976,932

5,983,948 872,913 4,691,118 2,604,801 943,063

99,603 459,081 3,075,260 1,583,266 4,010,556

0 0 21,803 0 35

16,026 8,085 78,717 28,315 23,169

1,396 2,199 14,723 2,518 109

6,690 52,397 14,609 7,235 909,221

205,416 872,287 224,927 59,676 86,089

86,693 65,196 91,707 58,456 192,168

0 2,858,927 0 2,236,148 0 48,683,570 0 1,036,882 0 6,847,729

999,309 1,832,922 48,253,477 970,345 6,630,624

1,823,253 381,234 384,370 56,661 158,596

5,991 0 0 0 8,489

18,601 18,378 22,139 9,876 40,226

11,774 3,613 23,583 0 9,795

Massachusetts ........ Michigan ................. Minnesota ............... Mississippi .............. Missouri ..................

181,032 229,870 322,648 927 64,152

36,847 368,402 528,792 388,190 346,872

314,307 296,519 366,424 105,046 180,676

0 0 0 0 0

6,612,392 3,753,254 4,126,333 5,201,064 3,339,904

6,473,289 2,940,821 1,057,007 4,760,984 2,422,787

42,334 750,424 3,028,058 421,569 865,114

44,100 5,400 0 743 0

51,090 51,455 38,350 13,509 36,088

1,579 5,153 2,917 4,260 15,914

Montana .................. Nebraska ................. Nevada ..................... New Hampshire ...... New Jersey ..............

7,671 1,589 199,999 70,333 549,992

141,135 199,665 20,214 20,383 16,238

58,976 73,512 113,595 90,266 453,666

0 948,768 0 3,897,600 0 2,524,937 0 700,358 1 29,450,339

345,272 1,330,670 2,496,785 678,625 29,308,877

581,491 2,550,462 13,703 11,367 63,175

0 0 0 0 3,000

7,560 13,828 13,003 9,861 65,568

14,445 2,640 1,446 505 9,719

New Mexico ............ New York ................. North Carolina ....... North Dakota ......... Ohio .........................

16,442 50,077 133,806 4,517 198,988

194,853 125,939 337,841 372,033 414,471

69,399 611,024 187,715 41,964 317,318

0 1,344,509 86,500 16,208,628 0 17,991,952 0 2,636,742 0 4,657,826

1,256,394 15,611,646 16,939,791 667,499 3,503,525

70,945 205,435 993,648 1,962,715 1,070,189

0 263,918 0 0 0

13,604 124,688 46,714 4,851 70,401

3,566 2,941 11,798 1,677 13,711

Oklahoma ............... Oregon ..................... Pennsylvania .......... Rhode Island .......... South Carolina .......

12,540 62,610 99,569 18,600 11,364

366,898 137,534 173,008 10,869 413,447

103,546 149,822 477,998 57,099 94,986

0 1,869,212 0 4,594,312 0 7,509,568 0 1,840,973 0 25,729,938

1,450,623 4,045,769 7,149,724 1,830,425 25,407,092

405,841 516,584 251,432 1,272 286,186

0 4,500 0 0 3,600

20,872 23,806 98,172 7,894 25,750

1,877 3,654 10,240 1,382 7,310

South Dakota .......... Tennessee ................ Texas ........................ Utah ......................... Vermont ..................

1,272 73,318 116,933 431,264 8,601

208,534 310,858 493,198 79,862 51,381

32,638 0 1,885,989 141,260 0 2,809,530 1,018,921 555,000 76,590,363 157,492 0 420,902 90,135 0 352,016

329,772 2,204,262 74,252,598 384,223 333,732

1,548,828 571,835 2,021,862 11,159 13,876

0 0 175,960 0 0

6,015 27,987 106,738 11,661 4,409

1,373 5,446 33,204 13,858 0

Virginia ................... Washington ............. West Virginia .......... Wisconsin ................ Wyoming .................

774,151 482,419 220 27,742 686

193,920 135,267 93,834 373,642 123,113

194,172 319,862 30,578 225,885 31,592

11,957,272 4,070,350 1,572,414 1,355,260 267,769

302,056 845,660 12,982 709,386 61,671

2,239 30,146 0 4,500 0

55,217 41,350 10,299 40,117 3,590

11,230 8,506 1,813 1,886 8,697

30,910 0 0 0 0

0 3,000 0 14,871 0

65,997 0 0 2,813 0

0 0 0 0 0

95,720 435 0 32,121 0

78,179 435 0 31,091 0

0 0 0 0 0

12,314 0 0 0 0

3,543 0 0 0 0

1,684 0 0 1,030 0

0 0 225,720 260 0

0 0 72,255 164,681 0

263 0 90,638 2,093 0

0 0 0 0 0

273 0 3,542,609 268,338 0

273 0 3,538,449 265,698 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 0 0 0

0 0 4,160 384 0

0 0 0 2,256 0

Alabama .................. Alaska ...................... Arizona .................... Arkansas ................. California ................

16,135 87,620 168,620 8,448 1,748,663

286,512 132,548 157,405 346,050 264,539

84,622 19,582 363,735 72,855 2,866,513

Colorado ................. Connecticut ............. Delaware ................. Florida ..................... Georgia ....................

1,036,765 224,387 3,572 685,632 156,828

405,042 36,475 29,688 233,773 610,918

Hawaii ..................... Idaho ........................ Illinois ...................... Indiana .................... Iowa .........................

171,031 6,276 846,838 76,428 24,352

Kansas ..................... Kentucky ................. Louisiana ................ Maine ....................... Maryland ................

Dist. of Columbia ... American Samoa .... Fed. States of Micronesia Guam ....................... Marshall Islands .... No. Mariana Islands Palau ........................ Puerto Rico ............. Virgin Islands ......... Undistributed .........

0 5,441,169 0 373,126 0 4,586,448 0 1,666,002 0 47,901,144

0 12,328,015 50,000 4,965,866 0 1,597,508 0 2,111,150 0 341,727

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, February 2004. Note: Amounts represent dollar volume of direct loans made during the fiscal year.

The Council of State Governments

95


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

Table 2.10 PER CAPITA AMOUNTS OF FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE, BY MAJOR OBJECT CATEGORY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In dollars) State and outlying area

United States resident population— July 1, 2003 (a)

Total

Retirement and disability

Other direct payments

Grants

Procurement

Salaries and wages

United States ......................

290,809,777

$6,910.31

$2,167.50

$1,522.98

$1,496.00

$1,011.02

$712.81

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

4,500,752 648,818 5,580,811 2,725,714 35,484,453

8,192.16 12,243.59 6,773.44 6,728.64 6,191.60

2,717.78 1,603.78 2,154.13 2,582.22 1,725.71

1,710.47 900.65 1,192.08 1,672.18 1,394.42

1,477.34 4,658.11 1,296.43 1,665.95 1,446.52

1,570.28 2,589.50 1,533.29 317.00 1044.11

716.29 2,491.55 597.51 491.29 580.85

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

4,550,688 3,483,372 817,491 17,019,068 8,684,715

6,345.02 8,209.05 6,190.71 6,659.64 5,977.19

1,840.33 2,167.23 2,379.29 2,655.35 1,918.99

1,101.87 1,627.52 1,469.28 1,765.15 1,315.65

1,321.65 1,543.35 1,444.38 1026.09 1,216.07

1,129.87 2,435.66 299.46 640.40 603.65

951.30 435.30 598.31 572.65 922.83

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

1,257,608 1,366,332 12,653,544 6,195,643 2,944,062

8,960.91 6,334.08 5,770.68 5,733.81 5,961.06

2,396.66 2,096.51 1,958.82 2,161.81 2,302.95

1,194.46 1,146.23 1,598.93 1,481.35 1,580.77

1,519.52 1,360.03 1,242.34 1,180.34 1,316.98

1,573.15 1,120.76 452.75 532.89 376.78

2,277.12 610.56 517.85 377.43 383.58

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

2,723,507 4,117,827 4,496,334 1,305,728 5,508,909

6,685.55 7,565.42 7,038.24 7,632.30 10,464.19

2,274.98 2,469.41 2,126.05 2,606.01 2,415.44

1,640.77 1,485.96 1,873.57 1,342.43 1,662.86

1,253.90 1,611.06 1,739.25 1,998.76 1,566.93

741.74 1243.15 710.51 1004.64 2,943.57

774.16 755.84 588.87 680.45 1,875.38

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

6,433,422 10,079,985 5,059,375 2,881,281 5,704,484

7,968.51 5,741.09 5,451.26 7,545.47 7,691.08

2,144.09 2,186.73 1,902.82 2,402.72 2,368.08

1,917.93 1,543.26 1,287.44 1,701.90 1,733.15

2,071.73 1,286.70 1,366.48 1,845.87 1,517.24

1,299.07 385.32 475.53 911.28 1,400.94

535.70 339.07 419.00 683.70 671.68

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

917,621 1,739,291 2,241,154 1,287,687 8,638,396

7,729.15 6,324.35 5,192.58 5,707.26 6,213.98

2,522.83 2,274.49 2,100.55 2,203.93 2,128.68

1,631.54 1,570.64 1017.53 1037.83 1,642.66

2,112.48 1,444.21 872.31 1,448.54 1,329.06

541.93 349.69 656.92 573.37 632.18

920.38 685.32 545.27 443.59 481.41

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

1,874,614 19,190,115 8,320,146 8,407,248 11,435,798

9,994.53 7,185.89 6,157.35 9,033.36 6,112.53

2,340.70 2,110.76 2,236.85 2,283.24 2,216.51

1,216.66 1,746.95 1,309.86 2,566.52 1,482.81

2,305.69 2,479.12 1,381.33 2,425.04 1,371.79

3,104.09 404.29 451.33 627.20 572.55

1027.38 444.77 777.98 1,131.36 468.87

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

3,511,532 3,559,596 12,365,455 1,076,164 4,147,152

7,191.72 5,970.74 7,306.68 7,467.11 6,760.82

2,498.19 2,254.22 2,593.69 2,355.21 2,436.79

1,567.79 1,445.96 2,034.35 1,664.22 1,322.92

1,462.51 1,433.65 1,506.09 2,076.22 1,439.30

708.48 336.59 658.02 612.44 871.53

954.74 500.32 514.54 759.02 690.28

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

764,309 5,841,748 22,118,509 2,351,467 619,107

8,114.01 7,292.74 6,349.93 5,741.00 7,176.49

2,366.77 2,352.80 1,769.96 1,655.08 2,192.99

2,146.85 1,527.23 1,316.41 872.38 1,337.26

2,221.10 1,550.40 1,285.01 1,209.84 2,150.36

498.44 1,287.62 1348.34 1133.27 914.33

880.85 574.70 630.21 870.44 581.55

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

7,386,330 6,131,445 1,810,354 5,472,299 501,242

11,163.05 7,073.06 7,858.35 5,525.40 8,432.05

2,647.23 2,215.97 3,128.21 2,123.12 2,298.04

1,275.38 1,388.48 1,683.40 1,330.69 1,201.40

1,067.64 1,448.40 1,967.51 1,378.53 3,224.42

4,175.11 1081.07 367.28 366.87 690.26

1,997.69 939.13 711.96 326.20 1017.93

District of Columbia .......... American Samoa ................ Fed States of Micronesia .. Guam ................................... Marshall Islands ................

563,384 57,844 108,143 163,593 56,429

61,680.52 3,424.52 1,343.26 9,405.53 3,219.24

3,433.26 708.59 4.36 1,262.47 17.57

4,205.84 211.18 68.81 559.38 0.87

7,650.50 1,905.87 1,260.63 2,447.10 1,166.95

20,192.09 478.66 9.45 3,213.96 2,033.84

26,198.83 120.22 0.00 1,922.61 0.00

Northern Marianas ........... Palau .................................... Puerto Rico ......................... Virgin Islands .....................

76,129 19,717 38,778,532 108,814

1,847.56 2,697.44 3,780.10 5,652.50

293.18 23.07 1,412.23 1,339.50

190.56 69.05 733.97 981.42

1175.68 2,571.93 1,239.56 2,588.45

110.67 33.39 144.72 236.57

77.47 0.00 249.63 506.54

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004. Note: U.S. total population and per capita figures in the top row include

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only the 50 states and the District of Columbia, the U.S. Outlying Areas represented at the bottom of the table are excluded from this figure. (a) All population figures represent resident population as of July 1, 2003.


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

Table 2.11 PERCENT DISTRIBUTION OF FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE, BY MAJOR OBJECT CATEGORY, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 (In dollars)

State and outlying area

Percent distribution of United States resident population— July 1, 2003 (a)

Total

Retirement and disability

Other direct payments

Grants

Procurement

Salaries and wages

United States ......................

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

100%

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

1.5 0.2 1.9 0.9 12.0

1.8 0.4 1.8 0.9 10.7

1.9 0.2 1.9 1.1 9.6

1.7 0.1 1.5 1.0 11.1

1.5 0.7 1.6 1.0 11.6

2.2 0.5 2.6 0.3 11.3

1.5 0.8 1.6 0.6 9.8

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

1.5 1.2 0.3 5.8 2.9

1.4 1.4 0.2 5.5 2.5

1.3 1.2 0.3 7.1 2.6

1.1 1.3 0.3 6.7 2.6

1.4 1.2 0.3 4.0 2.4

1.6 2.6 0.1 3.3 1.6

2.1 0.7 0.2 4.6 3.8

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

0.4 0.5 4.3 2.1 1.0

0.5 0.4 3.5 1.7 0.9

0.5 0.5 3.9 2.1 1.1

0.3 0.4 4.5 2.1 1.0

0.4 0.4 3.6 1.7 0.9

0.6 0.5 1.7 1.0 0.3

1.4 0.4 3.1 1.1 0.5

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

0.9 1.4 1.5 0.4 1.9

0.9 1.5 1.5 0.5 2.8

1.0 1.6 1.5 0.5 2.1

1.0 1.4 1.9 0.4 2.1

0.8 1.5 1.8 0.6 2.0

0.6 1.6 1.0 0.4 5.0

1.0 1.5 1.3 0.4 4.9

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

2.2 3.4 1.7 1.0 1.9

2.5 2.8 1.3 1.1 2.1

2.2 3.5 1.5 1.1 2.1

2.8 3.5 1.5 1.1 2.2

3.0 2.9 1.6 1.2 2.0

2.6 1.2 0.7 0.8 2.4

1.6 1.6 1.0 0.9 1.8

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

0.3 0.6 0.8 0.4 2.9

0.3 0.5 0.6 0.4 2.6

0.4 0.6 0.7 0.4 2.9

0.3 0.6 0.5 0.3 3.2

0.4 0.6 0.4 0.4 2.6

0.2 0.2 0.4 0.2 1.7

0.4 0.6 0.6 0.3 2.0

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

0.6 6.5 2.8 0.2 3.9

0.9 6.7 2.5 0.3 3.4

0.7 6.4 3.0 0.2 4.0

0.5 7.5 2.5 0.4 3.8

1.0 10.8 2.6 0.3 3.6

1.8 2.4 1.2 0.1 2.0

0.9 4.1 3.1 0.3 2.5

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

1.2 1.2 4.2 0.4 1.4

1.2 1.0 4.4 0.4 1.4

1.4 1.3 5.0 0.4 1.6

1.2 1.2 5.6 0.4 1.2

1.2 1.2 4.2 0.5 1.4

0.8 0.4 2.5 0.2 1.1

1.6 0.8 3.0 0.4 1.4

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

0.3 2.0 7.5 0.8 0.2

0.3 2.1 6.8 0.7 0.2

0.3 2.2 6.2 0.6 0.2

0.4 2.0 6.5 0.5 0.2

0.4 2.1 6.4 0.6 0.3

0.1 2.3 9.1 0.8 0.2

0.3 1.6 6.6 1.0 0.2

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

2.5 2.1 0.6 1.9 0.2

4.0 2.1 0.7 1.5 0.2

3.1 2.1 0.9 1.8 0.2

2.1 1.9 0.7 1.6 0.1

1.8 2.0 0.8 1.7 0.4

9.4 2.0 0.2 0.6 0.1

7.0 2.7 0.6 0.8 0.2

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Fed. States of Micronesia ... Guam ................................... Marshall Islands ................

0.2 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0

1.7 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0

0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0

0.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0

1.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0

3.5 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0

7.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.0

No. Mariana Islands .......... Palau .................................... Puerto Rico ......................... Virgin Islands ..................... Undistributed .....................

0.0 0.0 1.3 0.0 0.0

0.0 0.0 0.7 0.0 1.7

0.0 0.0 0.9 0.0 0.0

0.0 0.0 0.6 0.0 0.0

0.0 0.0 1.1 0.1 0.0

0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0 9.8

0.0 0.0 0.5 0.0 1.0

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004. Note: Values for the 50 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. outly-

ing areas were used in calculating these distributions. (a) All population figures represent resident population as of July 1, 2003.

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FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

Table 2.12 FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE FOR DEFENSE DEPARTMENT AND ALL OTHER AGENCIES, BY STATE AND OUTLYING AREA: FISCAL YEAR 2003 Federal expenditure (millions of dollars) State and outlying area

Department of Defense

Per capita federal expenditure (dollars) (a)

All other Department federal agencies of Defense

All other federal agencies

Percent distribution of federal expenditure Department of Defense

Department of Energy, All other defense related activities federal agencies (millions of dollars) (b)

United States ......................

$319,506

$1,741,978

$1,030

$5,880

$100

$100

$15,555

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

7,907 2,307 90,885 1,445 39,240

5,636 27,916 16,895 180,466 23,690

1,756.87 3,556.45 1,771.29 530.14 1105.82

6,435.29 8,687.14 5,002.15 6,198.50 5,085.78

2.5 0.7 3.1 0.5 12.3

1.7 0.3 1.6 1.0 10.4

22 3 0 0 1,248

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

5,184 8,545 564 15,969 9,003

23,690 20,050 4,497 97,372 42,907

1,139.14 2,453.13 689.81 938.3 1,036.69

5,205.88 5,755.92 5,500.90 5,721.34 4,940.50

1.6 2.7 0.2 5.0 2.8

1.4 1.2 0.3 5.6 2.5

719 0 0 8 0

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

4,484 653 4,938 3,650 1008

6,785 8,002 68,082 31,874 16,542

3,565.89 477.86 390.22 589.15 342.35

5,395.01 5,856.22 5,380.47 5,144.66 5,618.71

1.4 0.2 1.5 1.1 0.3

0.4 0.5 3.9 1.8 0.9

0 758 253 0 0

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

2,520 5,289 3,605 1,813 11,412

15,688 25,864 28,042 8,152 46,235

925.24 1284.51 801.69 1,388.81 2,071.48

5,760.31 6,280.91 6,236.55 6,243.49 8,392.71

0.8 1.7 1.1 0.6 3.6

0.9 1.5 1.6 0.5 2.7

0 15 0 0 190

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

7,422 3,462 2,120 3,644 7,991

43,843 54,408 25,460 18,096 35,883

1153.61 343.49 418.99 1,264.82 1,400.78

6,814.90 5,297.60 5,032.27 6,280.64 6,290.31

2.3 1.1 0.7 1.1 2.5

2.5 3.1 1.5 1.0 2.1

0 0 0 1 391

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

556 1,099 1,368 827 5,330

6,536 9,901 10,269 6,522 48,349

606.44 631.66 610.62 642.27 617.04

7,122.71 5,692.69 4,581.97 5,064.99 5,596.94

0.2 0.3 0.4 0.3 1.7

0.4 0.6 0.6 0.4 2.8

0 0 716 0 0

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

2,158 6,286 7,508 712 6,777

16,578 131,612 44,259 5,014 63,124

1,151.08 327.55 892.99 1122.56 592.65

8,843.45 6,858.33 5,264.36 7,910.10 5,519.87

0.7 2.0 2.3 0.2 2.1

1.0 7.6 2.5 0.3 3.6

3,469 349 0 0 508

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

3,986 1,097 8,054 1080 4,257

21,268 20,156 82,296 6,956 22,871

1,135.14 308.22 651.33 1003.17 1026.55

6,056.57 5,662.52 6,655.35 6,463.94 5,734.27

1.2 0.3 2.5 0.3 1.3

1.2 1.2 4.7 0.4 1.4

0 0 359 0 1,640

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

501 3,493 30,354 3,102 610

5,700 239,109 110,097 10,398 3,833

655.71 598.01 1,372.32 1,319.17 985.77

7,458.29 6,694.73 4,977.61 4,421.83 6,190.72

0.2 1.1 9.5 1.0 0.2

0.3 2.2 6.3 0.6 0.2

0 1,200 428 0 0

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

32,684 7,703 510 1,805 374

49,770 35,665 13,717 28,432 3,852

4,424.90 1,256.30 281.5 329.84 746.77

6,738.15 5,816.75 7,576.86 5,195.56 7,685.28

10.2 2.4 0.2 0.6 0.1

2.9 2.0 0.8 1.6 0.2

0 2,115 18 0 8

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Fed. States of Micronesia ... Guam ................................... Marshall Islands ................

3,321 13 0 817 114

31,429 185 145 722 67

5,894.45 231.67 0 4,992.00 2,028.01

55,786.07 319,286.00 1,343.26 4,413.52 1,191.23

1.0 0.0 0.0 0.3 0.0

1.8 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0

1,136 0 0 0 0

No. Mariana Islands .......... Palau .................................... Puerto Rico ......................... Virgin Islands ..................... Undistributed .....................

9 1 771 20 18,149

132 53 13,890 595 16,217

117.56 33.39 198.85 180.85 0

1,729.99 2,664.04 3,581.25 5,471.65 0

0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0 5.7

0.0 0.0 0.8 0.0 0.9

0 0 0 0 3

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, September 2004. (a) All population figures represent resident population as of July 1, 2003. (b) These data are presented for illustrative purposes only. They were com-

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piled from preiminary FY 2005 state budget allocation tables that were prepared for submission to Congress and that were found on the Department of Energy Web site.


FEDERAL AND STATE FINANCES

Table 2.13 STATE RANKINGS FOR PER CAPITA AMOUNTS OF FEDERAL GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE: FISCAL YEAR 2003 State

Total

Retirement and disability

Other direct payments

Grants

Procurement

Salaries and wages

Alabama .................................... Alaska ........................................ Arizona ...................................... Arkansas ................................... California ..................................

9 1 26 28 36

2 50 35 7 48

9 49 44 12 30

23 1 40 15 27

7 4 8 49 18

19 1 28 40 32

Colorado ................................... Connecticut ............................... Delaware ................................... Florida ....................................... Georgia ......................................

32 8 37 30 40

46 33 15 3 44

46 18 28 6 36

38 19 29 49 45

15 5 50 29 33

9 45 29 34 11

Hawaii ....................................... Idaho .......................................... Illinois ........................................ Indiana ...................................... Iowa ...........................................

6 33 43 46 42

14 42 43 34 21

43 45 19 27 20

20 36 44 47 39

6 16 40 37 44

2 27 37 48 47

Kansas ....................................... Kentucky ................................... Louisiana .................................. Maine ......................................... Maryland ..................................

29 16 25 15 3

24 10 38 5 12

16 25 5 32 14

43 16 14 11 17

23 13 24 19 3

16 18 30 24 4

Massachusetts .......................... Michigan ................................... Minnesota ................................. Mississippi ................................ Missouri ....................................

11 44 49 17 14

36 32 45 13 16

4 23 39 10 8

10 41 35 13 21

11 43 39 21 9

36 49 46 23 25

Montana .................................... Nebraska ................................... Nevada ....................................... New Hampshire ........................ New Jersey ................................

13 34 50 47 35

8 25 41 30 37

17 21 48 47 15

8 28 50 25 37

36 47 28 34 30

12 22 35 44 41

New Mexico .............................. New York ................................... North Carolina ......................... North Dakota ........................... Ohio ...........................................

4 22 38 5 39

20 40 27 23 28

41 7 38 1 26

5 3 32 4 34

2 42 41 31 35

6 43 15 5 42

Oklahoma ................................. Oregon ....................................... Pennsylvania ............................ Rhode Island ............................ South Carolina .........................

21 41 19 18 27

9 26 6 18 11

22 29 3 13 35

24 31 22 9 30

25 48 27 32 22

8 39 38 17 21

South Dakota ............................ Tennessee .................................. Texas .......................................... Utah ........................................... Vermont ....................................

10 20 31 45 23

17 19 47 49 31

2 24 37 50 33

6 18 42 46 7

38 12 10 14 20

13 33 26 14 31

Virginia ..................................... Washington ............................... West Virginia ............................ Wisconsin .................................. Wyoming ...................................

2 24 12 48 7

4 29 1 39 22

40 31 11 34 42

48 26 12 33 2

1 17 45 46 26

3 10 20 50 7

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Census, September 2004. Note: States are ranked from largest per capita amount of federal funds (1) to smallest per capita amount of federal funds (50). Rankings are based upon per

capita amounts shown in Table 2.10. Federal funds for loans and insurance coverage are excluded from consideration in this table. Also excluded are per capita amounts from the District of Columbia and the U.S. Outlying Areas.

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Chapter Three

STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH



STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH

The “Good” Legislature By Alan Rosenthal This article, based on the author’s book, Heavy Lifting: The Job of the American Legislature (CQ Press, 2004), explores the factors that indicate whether a legislature is “good” or not. Neither a legislature’s appearance, structure, nor it’s product ought to be considered indicative. A legislature’s performance of its principal functions is what counts. Legislatures do best at representing constituencies and constituents, next best at lawmaking, and least well at balancing the power of the executive. Critical to legislative performance of the latter two functions are leadership and standing committee systems. Any student of state legislatures at some time or another has been asked whether the legislature in a particular state is a good one, not so good, or even bad. Just how good or how bad? This is a difficult question to answer intelligently, but that hardly means that an answer is not given by academics and others. Often the media furnishes its own answer, at least to whether the legislature in its state is good or bad. The media usually tilts negatively, as is exemplified by the New York Times which characterizes the New York Legislature as the most dysfunctional in the nation.

What Standards Should We Use? How a legislature is rated depends greatly on the standards applied to the assessment. Three of the most frequently used standards are appearance, product and structure. The public, in general, goes by the standard of appearance. In most states the people do not like what they would see, if they were looking (which they aren’t). The legislature is disheveled at best, ragged at worst. It is unpredictable and frustratingly elusive. Actually, it is a wonderful example of democratic politics. But while most Americans applaud democracy in principle, not many appreciate the nitty-gritty of democracy in practice. Add to the unappealing appearance of the legislature and the legislative process, the picture conveyed by a media that stresses the negative, conflictual and scandalous. The result is low marks for the legislature by the public in the states. Product is an obvious standard. Most people care more about what comes out of the legislature than what goes on inside it. Political interest groups do not have much trouble assessing a legislature. A business organization, teachers association, or environmental group—any such entity judges a legislature in terms of what it does for or against its interests. Given this standard, one group’s “good” legislature is another group’s “bad” legislature. It is probably not possible to agree on product requisite for a

legislature’s goodness, except in the most general sense. In any case, product as a standard rests on the assumption that the legislature is a means to an end, the end being what it produces. However, the legislature is not only or primarily a means to an end; rather, it is an end in itself. That is because the institution and the process allow for a democratic means of reaching settlements among the different values, interests and priorities that people have. Structure as a standard came into prominence during the legislative reform movement of the late 1960s, the 1970s, and the early 1980s. A major assessment of the 50 state legislatures was conducted by the Citizens Conference on State Legislatures as part of the campaign for legislative reform. State legislatures were ranked from 1 to 50, depending on many factors, nearly all of which had to do with structure or capacity. Legislatures were awarded points if they had, among other things, deadlines for filing bills, superior offices for leaders, fewer than eighty members in the house, and so forth. The ranking that resulted from the evaluation—with California, New York and Illinois at the top—made as much sense as assessing a professional football team by the condition of its uniforms, the size of its locker rooms, and the cost of its training facilities rather than its performance on the field or the number of games it won and lost. What matters is neither appearance, product, nor structure, but how the legislature functions, how it does its job. In short, what matters most is legislative performance. The legislature’s job is essentially threefold: representing, lawmaking, and balancing the power of the executive. The three components overlap, but they can be considered separately. Representing constituencies and constituents entails legislators serving their districts’ interests and expressing their constituencies’ views. The former involves offering access to individuals and doing case The Council of State Governments

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STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH work for them and bringing home the bacon, in the form of funding formulas and projects, to the district as a whole. The latter involves expressing the dominant policy positions of the constituency, that is first, if constituents care about an issue and second, if they generally agree as to what should be done about it. Lawmaking involves the processes by which settlements are reached (or not reached) among contending values, interests, preferences and priorities which exist in the population and its organized groups and are represented and promoted in the legislature. In order to enact laws, including the most important one—the budget for the state, participants in the process engage in study, deliberation, strategizing, negotiation, compromise and attempts to build successive majorities. Balancing the power of the executive. In a system of separated powers, such as ours, the legislature is obliged to check and balance the executive. Earlier in the nation’s history, the legislature was the more powerful branch, but today the advantage is with the executive. Because the executive is one and the legislators are many (individuals who are also divided into contending parties and chambers), governors have the upper hand, should they choose to raise their arm. Unlike legislatures, chief executives can decide without having to build consensus. They can prioritize and focus their resources far more easily than can legislatures. And they have the bully pulpit—that is, access to the media—which allows them to build support among the public and indirectly within the legislature. To balance a strong executive, a legislature must be able to review seriously the governor’s budgetary and programmatic priorities, ensuring that they are consonant with the legislature’s. It must be able to initiate major items on its own, without depending upon the governor always to set the agenda.

How Well Do Legislatures Perform? If representation were their only job, legislatures would deserve high ratings—on average an A or an A-. The “good” legislature would be practically ubiquitous. Different legislatures do it differently, as would have to be expected. Representing a district of nearly 850,000 people, as is the job of a California senator, is not at all the same as representing a district of 16,459 people, as is the job of a Wyoming senator. Either way, legislators offer constituents a connection to the political and governmental world–that is, if constituents want to take advantage of such a connection. There is no question that most lawmakers take constituent service seriously and spend much of their time (and/or staff time) doing it. Serving the inter104

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ests of constituents and constituency is a relatively simple matter and legislators, no matter what the nature of their constituencies, can be expected to try to help people out. Expressing the views of constituents and constituency is more problematic, in particular because on most issues with which the legislature deals no views exist. On a few issues, however, a substantial proportion of the constituency does care (at least somewhat), as does the representative. Most often the views of the dominant constituency groups and those of the representative coincide. Only infrequently do they clash. At these times, depending on the issue, representatives will either take a Burkean position, voting according to their conscience or judgment, or a politically prudential position, going along with the dominant views of the constituency. It may be argued, of course, that not everyone in the state is represented equally by legislatures. Shouldn’t there be more women, minorities, bluecollar laborers, and younger people in legislatures? What about Republicans who live in Democratic dominated districts and vice versa? Are these political minorities fairly represented? Despite the fact that the legislature does not mirror the population of the state in demographic characteristics and despite the predominance of single-member districts in which minority party voters are shut out, the representational system works well. This is partly because the views of constituents are represented not only by the legislators they elect to office, but also by political parties and interest groups to which constituents belong or with whom they agree. Lawmaking is even more variable than representation. What should we expect by way of legislating in bodies that work to resolve conflict and achieve settlements, and that have to deal with difficult problems facing the state and its people? What, in short, makes for good lawmaking? Two important elements are study and deliberation. The fact is that both study and deliberation play substantial roles—indeed, the largest roles—in lawmaking processes, even though attention usually focuses more on political gamesmanship. Other important elements are strategy and negotiations. Whatever a bill’s substantive merits may be, it is necessary to put together and keep together the support required to get it enacted into law. Most members of what constitutes a majority have made a decision on the substantive and political merits of the case. Relatively few have to be won over through negotiations and bargaining. Still, disagreements— among members, between chambers, and with the governor—often have to be worked out.


STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH So, what constitutes better legislative performance at lawmaking? Each legislature engages in lawmaking in somewhat different fashion depending on the situation, circumstances, and personalities involved. The lawmaking process varies among legislatures, nor is it the same from issue to issue or day to day in the same legislature. Just as there are various ways to skin a cat, so there are various ways to make law. Good lawmaking requires a nice combination of ingredients, with substantial amounts of study and deliberation included. In this process, the role of standing committees is extremely important. It is here that measures are reviewed, shaped, and agreed on and where study and deliberation are mainly brought to bear. Standing committees are said to be the workhorses of the legislature. Indeed, they have to be the workhorses, if the legislature is to be “good.” This is not to minimize the importance of political considerations—that is, how a policy proposal plays in the state and what the public thinks of it. Overall, legislatures do reasonably well at lawmaking, but not as well as they do representing. Here, they would receive a grade of B+ or B. In any particular state it is easy to second-guess the legislature and the process. Who can say if there is a better way to pass a bill, or defeat one? A legislature probably always can do better in the study and deliberation department, but perhaps at the risk of slighting political aspects. But the process is not really manageable, depending as it does on contingencies of all kinds. As long as there is disagreement among members, interest groups to deal with, another house to worry about limited time, or a governor who wants a piece of the action, the process can take just about any course. As long as study and deliberation play a substantial part, different positions are expressed, and majorities have their way, legislatures essentially are making law the way it ought to be made. Performing the job of balancing the power of the executive overlaps that of lawmaking to a considerable extent. Balancing, however, requires more—that the legislature share with the governor the capacity to participate as equals in setting the priorities and policies for the state. Here is where legislatures are at the greatest disadvantage and where they perform least well. On average, they would receive no higher than a B or B- for this part of their job. When it comes to balancing variation from legislature to legislature is easier to specify. In a few states legislatures appear to hold a predominant position, because they are accorded power to draft the state budget or because they have traditionally shaped the budget and the executive has acquiesced. In most

states, however, legislatures have to assert themselves if they want to balance their governor, let alone their budget. Some of these legislatures have managed a spirit of independence, even with an executive controlled by the same party as that which commanded a majority in each house of the legislature. They have proven to be coequal branches of government. Other legislatures have chosen not to challenge their governor, either because party was too strong a bond or because they lacked the will to assert themselves. The balance of executive-legislative power depends partly on constitutional provisions, although constitutions can be changed. It depends also on what have become customary ways of doing things in a state. Finally, it depends on the personalities and politics at the time. At the very least, what is necessary for the legislature to do its balancing job is recognition that it ought to do it and that it have the will to try to do it.

What Conditions Have to Exist for a Legislature to be “Good”? What appears vital to the legislature’s performance are the following: 1. A connection by legislators to their constituencies and a responsiveness to constituency views where they exist. 2. A balance between the deliberative aspects of lawmaking on the one hand and the political aspects on the other, ensuring that the process takes into account arguments as to the merits of a measure. This ordinarily means that a legislative chamber delegates a major role to its standing committees, which have policy expertise, some continuity of membership, and the respect of the larger body. 3. Effective legislative leadership. Although leadership matters relatively little with regard to representation, it is hard to imagine the lawmaking process working without committee, party and chamber leadership. Among the many responsibilities of leadership are finding common ground, facilitating compromise, forging consensus, and enabling a legislative majority to find and work its will. It is even harder to imagine that the power of the executive could be balanced without effective leadership. Legislative leaders have to represent the senate and the house to the governor and then negotiate the best deal possible from their chamber’s point of view.

What Will Make Legislatures Better? It is easier to identify what will make legislatures worse than what will make them better. Term limits, The Council of State Governments

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STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH for example, clearly will make them worse. The effects of their adoption in the 1990s are beginning to be felt. These effects vary from state to state, but overall term limits are impeding the legislature’s job performance. This is demonstrated in a large-scale study conducted by the National Conference of State Legislatures, The Council of State Governments, the State Legislative Leaders Foundation, and a number of political scientists. Leaders generally are weakened, committees are more frequently bypassed, and governors are advantaged vis-a-vis the legislature. Although the results of investigation in a number of termlimited states are inconclusive on the point, a survey of the nation’s legislators indicates that representation also suffers. Legislators in term-limited states reported spending less time than legislators in nonterm-limited states keeping in touch with constituents, engaging in constituent service, securing state funds and projects for their districts, and being responsive to the demands and views of their constituents. The first rule for physicians is “do no harm.” That rule might well be applicable to the efforts of those who are critical of and want to bring substantial change to state legislatures. State legislatures are far from perfect, but they seem to be doing what they

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were intended to do. Ways in which their job performance can be improved and in which legislatures can become better probably do exist, but they are difficult to identify and even more difficult to implement effectively. Mechanistic reforms are not the answer, if institutional improvement is the objective. Rather, leaders and members have to want to build and/or refashion their institutions, have to be around long enough for changes they institute to take hold, and have to be succeeded by colleagues who are also committed to maintaining their legislatures as effective institutions. No single agenda for legislative improvement makes sense everywhere; no formulas exist that will work no matter what or where the problem. Making the legislature “good” is work that must be continually in progress and work that must be specific to each of the nation’s states. About the Author Alan Rosenthal is a professor of public policy at the Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University. He has worked with legislatures throughout the nation and participated in programs of the National Conference of State Legislatures and The Council of State Governments. His latest book, from which this article is drawn, is Heavy Lifting: The Job of the American Legislature (CQ Press, 2004).


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2004 Legislative Elections By Tim Storey Before launching into the analysis of the 2004 state legislative elections, it is instructive to go back two years to the last major legislative elections. The year 2002 was a banner year for the Republican Party in legislatures; they seized eight legislative chambers and claimed bragging rights by taking the majority of legislative seats nationwide for the first time in 50 years.

When it comes to state legislatures, Democrats bounced back big in 2004 despite their defeat at the top of the ticket where George Bush extended his stay in the White House by defeating John Kerry by a relatively close 35 electoral vote margin. The Democrats took control of seven legislative chambers and had a quasi-victory by gaining ties in both the Iowa Senate and Montana House—both controlled by the GOP before the election. The Democrats also regained the title of holding the most seats although their margin is a tiny fraction of 1 percent— a mere one seat at press time. Republicans were not without victories in 2004 and some of them were historic. Helped in part by President Bush’s coattails, they won four legislative chambers. Republicans still control more legislatures than the Democrats, but it’s as close as possible without being tied. As 2005 sessions were gaveled to order, Republicans controlled 20 legislatures, Democrats held 19, and 10 were split with neither party having both legislative chambers. Nebraska is not only a unicameral legislature but also nonpartisan. Before the election, the breakdown was 21 Republican legislatures, 17 Democratic and 11 split. The number of chambers controlled by each party also ended up very close after the election. Democrats hold 47 chambers—only two less than the 49 legislative bodies where Republicans have the majority. Two legislative chambers are tied in 2005— the Iowa Senate now deadlocked at 25–25, and the Montana House knotted at 50–50. There were regular legislative elections in 85 chambers in 2004. All states except Alabama, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, New Jersey and Virginia had seats up in 2004. In Michigan and Minnesota, just the House of Representatives were up for election—not the Senates. Overall, 79 percent, or 5,809, of the nation’s legislative seats held scheduled elections. In 35 percent of those races, a major party candidate did not have opposition from the opposite party but may have had an opponent from a third party.

Control of Legislative Seats Perhaps the parity in state legislatures is best understood by looking at the total number of seats held by each party. There are 7,382 total legislative seats in the 50 states. Of those, 7,316 are held by partisans from the two major political parties. Third party legislators hold 16 seats, and Nebraska voters choose the 49 senators there in a non-partisan election. As of mid-January 2005, the difference between the two major parties was a miniscule one seat, with the advantage going to the Democrats. That means that the Democrats have a .00014 percent edge over Republicans in the total number of seats held— almost exact parity. Heading into 2004 elections, Republicans had an advantage of just under 1 percent or 65 seats. Democrats closed the gap in November. The Democrats success came despite losing the race for the White House. This was only the sixth time since 1940 that the party winning the White House actually lost seats in state legislatures. The last time that happened was in 1992 when Bill Clinton won the presidency but Democrats lost well over 100 seats in legislatures.

Altered States In every two-year election cycle, an average of 12 legislative chambers sees a shift in majority control. Democrats began the election cycle on a good note by taking control of the previously tied New Jersey Senate in the 2003 election. Last November, 13 legislative chambers switched party control bringing the total number of switches in this round to 14. Republicans won control of four chambers previously held by Democrats including three Southern legislative chambers long held by Democrats. In the Oklahoma House, Republicans gained nine seats to take control for the first time in 82 years. In 2004, Oklahoma became the 12th state where term limits have taken effect, and the first-year impact definitely helped make Oklahoma House Democrats vulnerable to a takeover. There are 15 states with term limits for legislators on the books. The Council of State Governments

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STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH since 1938 earning them the top spot in terms of the highest number of shifts in majority party. Another chamber that has gone back and forth between the two parties is the Washington Senate taken back in this election by the Democrats. That marks the fourth time in the last 10 years that the Washington Senate has changed hands—the most volatile chamber in that regard over the past decade due partially to a competitive redistricting plan drawn by a commission following the 2000 census. Other Democratic gains were largely in the West, where the party saw five legislative bodies go to their column. The Washington Senate, Oregon Senate, Montana Senate, Colorado Senate and Colorado House all switched to Democratic majorities. The Oregon Senate was tied entering the election. Democrats have not controlled both chambers of the Colorado legislature since 1960. In addition to the Western gains, Democrats lone

Another big Southern victory for Republicans was in Georgia where the House went Republican for the first time since 1870. A court-drawn redistricting map in use for the first time in the November election left Democrats open to a sweep by Republican challengers. Including several postelection party switches by Democrats changing to Republican, the GOP picked up a stunning 25 seats in the Georgia House to establish a comfortable majority of 99–81. Like Georgia, the Tennessee Senate went Republican for the first time since the 1870s. The Republican advantage there is only one seat and that narrow margin led to a coalition vote electing Democratic Senator John Wilder as leader. Wilder is the longest serving legislative leader in the United States having assumed his post in 1971. Republicans also seized the Indiana House, a chamber that has swapped hands 14 times since 1938. The Montana House and Connecticut Senate have switched party control 15 times

Figure A: Legislative Seats Held by Democrats and Republicans 1938–2005 6,000

Total Republicans Total Democrats

Total Legislative Seats

5,000

4,000

Election Year Note: Percentage calculation excludes nonpartisan elections in Minnesota (1938–74) and Nebraska (1938–present)

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2004

2002

2000

1998

1996

1994

1992

1990

1988

1986

1984

1982

1980

1978

1976

1974

1972

1970

1968

1966

1964

1962

1960

1958

1956

1954

1952

1950

1948

1946

1944

1942

1940

2,000

1938

3,000


STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH bright spot in the South was in North Carolina where the House of Representatives moved back to the Democrats after two years of unsettled control that saw a tied chamber due to a legislator switching parties operate under a power sharing arrangement. The only state in the Northeast where party control shifted was Vermont. Democrats took control of the Vermont House by picking up 14 seats to give them a comfortable working majority of 23 seats over the Republicans in 2005.

One Vote Does Count The 2004 race for governor of Washington was one of the closest gubernatorial elections in American history. But a legislative race in Montana perhaps offered the best lesson for voters on why one vote really matters. After votes were tallied on election night, Constitution Party candidate Rick Jore appeared the victor by a mere two votes in

Montana House district 12 over the nearest challenger, Democrat Jeanne Windham. The Republican candidate received a few hundred votes less in the three-way race. Election officials conducted a recount that left the race exactly tied with 1,559 votes each. Under Montana law, if a legislative race ends in a tie, the sitting governor gets to select the person to serve. Outgoing Montana Gov. Judy Martz chose Jore saying that he better reflected the conservative views of the district. However, the Montana Supreme Court invalidated a handful of ballots counted for Jore and awarded the seat to Windham. What makes this an even more cautionary tale is that the partisan composition of the Montana House ended up at 50 Republicans, 50 Democrats. The tied race proved critical in determining control of the Montana House. Voters should know that there are close races in every election, and sometimes, one vote decides the winner.

Figure B: State Legislative Party Control

■ Republican ■ Democrat ■ Split States ■ Nonpartisan

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Regional Analysis Democrats once again lost ground in the South, showing a net loss of 70 seats since the 2002 election. Republicans controlled not a single legislative chamber in the South until the 1994 election. In the 10 years since, they have made remarkable strides and now control half of the chambers in the region. The Democrats still have more seats in the South holding 53 percent of all Southern legislative seats down from 94 percent in 1960. The strongest region for the GOP continues to be the Midwest, where they control 58 percent of all seats and only saw a net loss of one seat from 2002 to 2004. The Democrats made their largest gains in the East, picking up 58 seats during the last two years and in the West, where they netted 27 seats.

Divided Government After factoring the winners in this year’s 11 gubernatorial contests, the number of states with divided partisan control of government will once again be near a record high at 29—that is two less than the high mark of 31 last seen following the 1998 election. Democrats control all of state government in only eight states while Republicans claim both the legislature and governor in 12 states.

Turnover Legislative turnover returned to normal levels in the 2004 election after spiking up in the post-redistricting election of 2002. Overall, 19.6 percent of the legislators will be new to their chambers in 2005. Some of those “freshmen” are actually moving from one chamber to the other or served previously in the legislature. That figure is considerably lower than the 26.3 percent turnover two years ago. Not surprisingly, the highest turnover was in the term limited states. The Maine Senate topped the list with just over 45 percent turnover. The Oklahoma House, where term limits took effect for the first time, saw 39.6 percent turnover in this election. Term limits prevented a total of 257 legislators in 12 states from running for reelection in the 2004 elections.

Demographics of Legislators Since 1969, the number of women serving in leg-

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islatures has increased substantially from several hundred to 1,659 in 2005—or 22.5 percent. After three decades of growth, the number of women in legislatures has held steady in recent years. Colorado and Maryland currently have the highest percentages of women legislators, at 34 percent. The 2000 census showed the percentage of Americans reporting Hispanic heritage was roughly equal to the percentage of African-Americans, at about 12.5 percent each. That equality is not evident in state legislatures, where just over 8 percent of legislators are black and only 3 percent are Latino. There are now 231 Hispanic state legislators according to a count by the National Association of Latino Elected Officials which is up 13 from 2003. The average age of a state legislator is 53 years old. Lawyers remain the top occupational category but are only 16 percent of state legislators.

Conclusion Only the Virginia House of Delegates and New Jersey Assembly stand for regular elections in 2005, so most legislators will get a break from campaigning. Several trends continued in 2004 legislative elections. The partisan competition for control of legislatures and state governments continued to grow in intensity resulting in near stalemate on Election Day. The costs of legislative campaigns continued to skyrocket in swing districts, and the sophistication of those campaigns continued to grow. The big question for 2006 is whether either party can break away and establish itself as the dominant party of legislatures.

About the Author Tim Storey is a senior fellow in the Legislative Management Program of the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) in Denver, Colo. He specializes in the areas of elections and redistricting as well as legislative staff organization and management. He has staffed NCSL’s Redistricting Task Force since 1990 and authored many articles on the redistricting and elections process. Every two years, Storey leads NCSL’s elections project tracking and analyzing the outcome of state legislative races and statewide ballot questions. He received his undergraduate degree from Mars Hill College and his master’s degree from the Graduate School of Public Affairs of the University of Colorado.


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The Effects of Legislative Term Limits By Jennifer Drage Bowser The following is a summary of the research conducted over the past three years by Joint Project on Term Limits. The project is a cooperative effort by the National Conference of State Legislatures, the Council of State Governments, the State Legislative Leaders Foundation and a group of legislative scholars.

The term limits movement of the 1990s may have run out of steam on the ballot, but the limits enacted between 1990 and 2000 certainly continue to have an impact in legislatures around the country. The first states to vote on implementing term limits were California, Colorado and Oklahoma in 1990, and the most recent state was Nebraska in 2000. In all, voters in 21 states approved legislative term limits. However, the limits have either been repealed by legislatures (in Idaho and Utah) or thrown out by state courts (in Massachusetts, Oregon, Washington and Wyoming) in six states, leaving 15 with term limits currently on the books. Twelve state legislatures presently operate under term limits, and limits in the remaining three will kick in between 2006 and 2010.

The Joint Project on Term Limits The Joint Project on Term Limits (JPTL) was formed in 2000 in recognition of the fundamental changes term limits were expected to produce in state legislatures. Legislatures play a critical role in shaping and delivering state budgets and policies, and therefore an understanding of how term limits would reshape the legislative landscape is critical in maintaining the effectiveness the institution. The JPTL is a unique coalition of organizations and academics, comprised of the National Conference of State Legislatures, The Council of State Governments, the State Legislative Leaders Foundation, and a group of distin-

guished legislative scholars from various universities around the country. The goal of the JPTL has been to identify the effects, both positive and negative, that term limits have on state legislatures, and to share ideas for adapting to the changes limits bring. It has sought to achieve this goal through a variety of methods, including case studies, data collection and survey work. Between 2001 and 2003, in-depth case studies were conducted in six states with term limits: Arizona, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Maine and Ohio. These states represent a range of types of legislatures, including part-time citizen legislatures, full-time professionalized legislatures and hybrid bodies. In 2003, case studies of three legislatures without term limits— Kansas, Illinois and Indiana—were conducted to form a control group, enabling researchers to iden-

Table A STATES WITH LEGISLATIVE TERM LIMITS Year enacted

Limit

Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Florida

1992 1992 1990 1990 1992

8 6 6 8 8

2000 1998 1996 1998 2000

8 8 8 8 8

2000 2000 1998 1998 2000

Consecutive Lifetime Lifetime Consecutive Consecutive

Louisiana Maine Michigan Missouri (a) Montana

1995 1993 1992 1992 1992

12 8 6 8 8

2007 1996 1998 2002 2000

12 8 8 8 8

2007 1996 2002 2002 2000

Consecutive Consecutive Lifetime Lifetime Consecutive

Nebraska Nevada Ohio Oklahoma (b) South Dakota

2000 1996 1992 1990 1992

N.A. 12 8 12 8

N.A. 2010 2000 2004 2000

8 12 8 12 8

2006 2010 2000 2004 2000

Consecutive Lifetime Consecutive Lifetime Consecutive

State

House First impact

Senate Limit First impact

Lifetime or consecutive

Source: National Conference of State Legislatures. Key: N.A.—Not applicable (a) Because of special elections in Missouri, eight House members were termed out in 2000 and one senator was termed out in 1998. (b) Oklahoma’s limits are not chamber-specific. Members are limited to a total of 12 years in the Legislature, which may be served in either chamber.

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Table B TURNOVER IN HOUSE CHAMBERS IN SELECT TERM LIMIT STATES (percent) State

Average 1981–1990

Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Maine Ohio

25% 14 16 30 25 17

1990 25% 17 20 22 25 14

1992 48% 19 40 35 34 21

1994 35% 31 41 28 48 21

Election years 1996 1998 32% 20 46 (a) 34 42 14

2000

25% 57 (a) 35 35 (a) 30 20

45% (a) 34 39 37 31 55 (a)

2002 58% 32 43 29 48 29

2004 33% 39 30 28 38 16

Sources: Data for 1981-2002: Gary Moncrief, Richard G. Niemi and Lynda W. Powell, “Time, Term Limits, and Turnover,” Legislative Studies Quarterly XXIX (August 2004): 357-81. Data for 2004: National Conference of State Legislatures. Key: (a) Year of term limits’ first impact.

tify which changes may be attributable to term limits and which may reflect broader institutional changes. In each case study, numerous interviews were conducted with legislators, legislative leaders, legislative staff, lobbyists, journalists and other observers of the legislature, and a wide array of data was collected. In addition to the case studies, the JPTL has conducted two surveys. The first was a national survey of all legislators, conducted in 2002. It questioned legislators on their background, including occupations and prior elected offices held, and their attitudes and approaches to legislative work. The second survey was conducted in the nine case study states in 2003. It was sent to selected legislative observers, including senior legislative staff, experienced lobbyists and journalists, executive branch officials, and other individuals who had spent at least 10 years involved in or observing the legislature in one way or another. It asked questions about how the legislature had or had not changed in the past 10 years. In all, the JPTL has collected the largest body of data ever gathered about the effects of term limits in multiple states.

The First Lesson: Results Vary The first lesson to heed when studying term limits is that it is very difficult to generalize across states about their effects. What happens in Arkansas, a smaller population state with a citizen legislature, does not necessarily happen in Ohio, a large population state with a highly professionalized legislature. Results vary according to the type of limits too— states with shorter limits, such as Michigan’s lifetime limit of six years in the House and eight in the Senate, are likely to see more dramatic effects than states with more generous limits, like Arizona’s limit of no more than eight consecutive years per cham112

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ber. What follows is a round-up of results of the JPTL to date.

Turnover The most obvious effect of term limits is an increase in turnover. The increase is particularly dramatic in the first year of term limits’ impact, when it is not uncommon for over half of a chamber to be ineligible to run for reelection. Over time, the turnover rates under term limits will likely level out. The immediate effect has been to increase turnover in the 10 house chambers where term limits had taken effect by 2000 by an average of 11.5 percent in the decade of 19912000 compared to 1981-1990.1 In the 2004 elections, eight of the 10 highest turnover house chambers had term limits. The average turnover for all house chambers in 2004 was 20.6 percent, compared to 37.1 percent in term-limited house chambers. High turnover is not necessarily a problem; in fact, many of the term limits states historically have high levels of turnover in their legislatures. The difference is that before term limits took hold, these legislatures generally had a handful of members who served for many years, and their leadership and expertise were a valuable resource to the institution. Term limits have removed these long-serving members, and the effects of that are proving to be profound.

Who Gets Elected One of the term limits proponents’ promises that was most appealing to voters was that term limits would bring more diversity to state legislatures. By and large, that has not happened. With a few exceptions, the numbers of female and minority legislators have not changed. Latinos have made gains in Arizona and California, but this is more likely attributable to the changing demographics of these states’ populations than to term limits. The number


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Table C FEMALE LEGISLATORS IN SELECT TERM LIMIT STATES (percent of total membership) State

1993–1994

Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Maine Ohio

36% 10 24 34 32 22

1995–1996 30% 13 20 31 26 24

1997–1998

1999–2000

37% 17 22 35 26 22

36% 15 26 34 28 21

2001–2002 34% 13 28 34 30 22

2003–2004 27% 16 30 33 27 20

2005 33% 16 31 34 24 20

Sources: 2005 election results and all data for California and Maine are from the Center for Women and Politics, Rutgers University. All other data from the Joint Project on Term Limits.

of women in the California legislature has grown dramatically, but JPTL analysts attribute this to factors other than term limits. For instance, the national women’s group EMILY’s List became more active in California during the 1990s, and Democrats made big gains during that period, leading to increases in both female and minority representation. The only state among the six JPTL case studies where an increase in female membership in the legislature may be attributable to term limits is Arkansas. In most states, the average age of legislators has changed little. It has decreased by two years in Ohio, and in Arizona the Senate is becoming older in relation to the House, due to the house-to-senate migration that is becoming so common in term-limited legislatures. One change that is certainly a result of term limits is that the legislature has become a rung on the career ladder for many elected officials. An increasing number of new legislators come to office with local or county legislative experience, and more choose to seek other elective office when their terms expire, rather than retiring from politics. While one hears and reads much about the inexperience of new members in term limited legislatures, it is certainly not true that today’s new members are less experienced or knowledgeable than the new members of the pre-term limits era. The problem is instead that there are so many more new members each session under term limits, and they have less time to learn. Adaptations States have responded to the huge influxes of new members with a remarkable array of new training programs. Dramatic improvements in new member orientations are universal in term limited legislatures. These sessions are often conducted in cooperation

with a university, include faculty pulled from legislative staff, state agencies, universities, think tanks and former legislators, and rely on a variety of training methods such as mock committee hearings and floor sessions. Curriculum includes instruction on legislative rules and procedures, policy issues, the budget process, computer systems, the roles of legislative staff, and in some legislatures, even bus tours of the state to make members familiar with the issues facing various regions. Other ideas include assigning veteran members to serve as mentors for new members, with a goal of providing continuous onthe-job training by helping the new members understand legislative procedures, conveying norms of legislative behavior, and passing on historical information about past legislative actions. Staff has reached out to new members with more summary documents, and an increased reliance on the web and electronic communications with members.

Legislative Leaders Perhaps the most noticeable changes in many term limited legislatures have to do with leadership. Leaders rise to the top more quickly than before, but stay for a briefer period and wield less influence than in the past. Before term limits, leadership positions were often held by long-serving members whose tenure in leadership lasted for many years. Under term limits, the tenure of most presiding officers does not exceed two years, and they enter leadership with less legislative experience than in the past. The path to leadership is evolving in many states. A near universal sentiment among those interviewed for the JPTL was that new members have to begin jockeying for leadership during their first term. In many states, a ladder has evolved, with presiding officers first serving as whip then majority leader before beThe Council of State Governments

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STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH coming speaker or president. The criteria for selecting leaders has changed in many states too—whereas leaders used to come to power through committee chairmanships or seniority, now many members look for leaders with campaign and fundraising skills. The “lame duck” factor plays a critical role in the declining influence of party leaders in term limited legislatures. Since most leaders assume their leadership position during the last legislative session before they are termed out, members know their time is limited. They see less value in cooperating with a leader whose days are numbered, and leaders are less able to sanction members who challenge them. In short, members know that they can outwait a leader, and they do. What all of this adds up to is less procedural orderliness and diminished party discipline. The role of leaders has changed under term limits too. They now have more responsibility than ever to educate inexperienced new members about basic procedures, processes and policies, and to explain the role of the legislature and pass on the norms of behavior for their chamber. This task becomes more difficult as leaders take on their position with limited legislative experience themselves. Leaders are also playing a greater role in fundraising and campaigns in many term limited states. This is particularly true in Ohio, where leadership has developed a highly organized system for aiding candidates in fundraising and campaigning through the caucuses. This has strengthened the leadership’s role in the caucus in Ohio to the extent that the Ohio Legislature has not experienced the decline in leadership influence that other term-limited legislatures have. A positive aspect of term limits is that it affords more members the opportunity to serve in leadership positions. Adaptations The Arkansas House increased their number of speakers pro tem from one to four, one from each congressional district, thus widening the speaker’s leadership circle. They also established formal floor leader positions to help maintain party unity. In Colorado, staff has prepared leadership notebooks with calendar deadlines, procedural rules, and sketches of common floor situations, problems and reactions.

Committees Most interviewees reported that committees are weaker and less collegial and courteous under term limits, due to the high turnover in committee chairs and the reduced legislative and policy experience of 114

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members. Research in California indicates that committee gatekeeping has declined significantly. It is difficult for inexperienced legislators to identify problematic legislation, so fewer bills are killed in committee. The situation in Colorado is similar, where bills are less well-crafted when passed to the floor. In Maine, interview-ees report that members give less deference to the work of committees, and committee reports are more likely to be challenged on the floor than in the past, even if they were adopted unanimously or with large majorities. Adaptations Arizona reduced the number of committees to make up for the shortage of qualified chairs. In Arizona and Colorado, new members serve as vice-chair on committees, and this is viewed as a training position for an eventual move to chair. In Arkansas, each of the 10 House standing committees now has three permanent subcommittees, each with a chair and a vicechair, giving many people committee responsibility and experience. In Maine, committee staff maintains files including bills considered, testimony received and amendments offered for several sessions before they are transferred to state archives.

Staff The importance, and in some cases, the influence of legislative staff has grown under term limits. Legislators rely more than ever on nonpartisan staff for roles they have traditionally filled—providing procedural advice, policy history, and revenue and budgetary analysis. Interviewees in all case studies states, however, reported that non-partisan staff organizations have made significant efforts to remain nonpartisan and avoid providing policy advice. As a result, partisan staff has increased in both number and influence in many term limited states. In all of the case studies states, staff report an increased workload under term limits. In addition to their traditional roles, they are called upon now to provide historical information on how past legislatures dealt with issues and to explain basic principles about issues. They explain legislative rules and procedures, and script the phrases used to make motions and move legislative actions. In many ways, legislative staff now represent the key repository of institutional memory in the legislature. Adaptations In many term limited legislatures, the number of staff, particularly partisan staff, has increased as workloads have increased. Many legislatures also of-


STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH fer more training opportunities to staff. Non-partisan staff organizations have carefully sought to maintain their non-partisan reputations.

Balance of Power The JPTL has yielded mixed results on the questions of whether and how power has shifted under term limits. In half the states, interviewees felt that the legislature had lost power to the governor and executive branch. In the other half, however, there is little evidence to indicate that this has happened. In California, Colorado and to a lesser extent Maine, the executive branch appears to have gained influence due to term limits. The governor and agency heads have greater expertise on issues, maintain institutional knowledge of issues, and can wait out the legislature as needed. Legislators may lack the policyspecific experience to effectively question departmental heads in committee hearings. Legislators may also avoid conflict with a governor who have influence over their futures—hoping for an executive appointment or help in running for another office. In Arkansas and Ohio, it appears that the legislature may have gained influence due to term limits. Term limited legislators in Arkansas may feel that they have nothing to lose in not supporting the governor. Whereas they may have been more cooperative in the past as they looked toward a long legislative career, now they feel free to assert their independence, particularly in their last term. In Ohio, a particularly strong House speaker has consolidated the power of his caucus and the House leadership. The results on the influence of lobbyists under term limits are mixed. On the one hand, they are a valuable resource for policy information and history. On the other, lobbyists face a challenge in forming relationships with a constantly changing membership, and new members are often suspicious of lobbyists. It does appear that the playing field has leveled for lobbyists—newer lobbyists can compete more evenly with veterans for influence, because the veterans have lost their old cultivated relationships. While it is clear that lobbyists’ role has changed under term limits, it is not clear that they have gained or lost power as a result.

Adaptations In Maine, a new oversight agency was established within the legislature. The Office of Program Evaluation and Governmental Accountability was modeled after similar agencies in other states. It has a professional, nonpartisan staff, and represents Maine’s most ambitious attempt to address the effects of term limits. Colorado formed a joint task force to review ethics rules for lobbyists and make recommendations for changes.

Looking to the Future It is clear that term limits have brought many changes to the legislatures where they are in effect. Term limited legislatures report more general chaos, a decline in civility, reduced influence of legislative leaders and committees, and in some states, a shift in power relationships. However, the bottom line is that legislatures are resilient and highly adaptive institutions, and they continue to function efficiently under term limits. Many of the problems experienced by term limited legislatures are the same problems faced by all legislatures; term limits simply tend to amplify and accelerate them. As term limits continue to tighten their hold, and as veteran members continue to cycle out, the term limited legislatures will continue to evolve. As they do, they will provide valuable ideas that all legislatures, term limited or not, can adopt to improve their institutions.

Notes 1 Gary Moncrief, Richard G. Niemi and Lynda W. Powell, “Time, Term Limits, and Turnover,” Legislative Studies Quarterly XXIX (August 2004): 357-81.

About the Author Jennifer Drage Bowser is a program principal in the Legislative Management Program at the National Conference of State Legislatures. Her work focuses on the areas of term limits, elections, initiatives and referenda, and campaign finance reform. She is the project manager for the Joint Project on Term Limits.

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State Legislative Redistricting in 2003–2004: Emerging Trends and Issues in Reapportionment By Ronald E. Weber Whereas the redistricting round of the 1990s can be described as the round of racial and ethnic predominance, the 2000 round showed a growing emergence of partisanship as the predominant pattern of conflict. The experience of state legislatures in the latest round should provide an overall pattern for state legislative redistricting agencies to weather the terrain and successfully create plans in the future. The future political and legal terrain will continue to be complex and multifaceted. Introduction This article assesses the progress of the states in redrawing state legislative district lines for the elections of the remainder of the decade as several states had to complete or revise their districting after the elections of 2002. It also describes the final emerging trends this decade and highlights the experience of several states during 2003–2004 in dealing with both old and new issues in redistricting. Whereas the redistricting round of the 1990s can be described as the round of racial and ethnic predominance, the 2000 round showed a growing emergence of partisanship as the predominant pattern of conflict. The state legislatures were able to take into account race or ethnicity in drawing lines as had been the emphasis in the previous decade; however, since political partisanship of voters correlates highly with the racial and ethnic makeup of populations, the use of race and ethnicity was subordinated to the use of partisan criteria with the 2000 decade proving to be a round of either partisan gerrymandering or bi-partisan protection of incumbent state legislators (see McDonald, 2004). Supreme Court cases of the 1990s and early 2000s ultimately sanctioned the use of partisanship as a predominant factor in redistricting, even though the court in Miller v. Johnson (515 U.S. 900) in 1995 argued for the use of a set of race-neutral, objective criteria such as compactness, contiguity, respect for political subdivisions and respect for communities of interest. The first controlling case is Easley v. Cromartie (532 U.S. 234, 2001), where the court upheld North Carolina’s use of partisanship when it redrew its unconstitutional congressional districting plan, despite the plaintiffs’ contention that the plan relied predominantly on race. This decision opened the door to the unbridled use of partisanship as the 116

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predominant factor in redistricting in the current decade. The second controlling case is Vieth v. Jubelirer (541 U.S. 267, 2004), where the court upheld Pennsylvania’s use of partisanship when the state legislature created its congressional districting plan in 2002. A plurality of the Supreme Court along with one concurring justice held that the plaintiffs had been unable to prove a partisan gerrymander by the Pennsylvania state legislature under the current judicial standards of Davis v. Bandemer (478 U.S. 109, 1986) and hence upheld the Pennsylvania congressional districting plan. However, the plurality opinion of the Supreme Court signaled that four justices desire to overturn Davis v. Bandemer and rule partisan claims non-justiciable.

Partisanship Triumphs Legislative redistricting is among the most partisan of policy activities undertaken by state legislatures. In essence, the legislature takes the position that political districting is a matter of preserving selfinterest: the spoils of politics belong to the strongest and district line-drawing can be manipulated to improve the political position of the party which controls each chamber. A large number of states operate under the norm that each chamber is the primary arbiter of the lines for its chamber so that the house defers to the wishes of the senate and vice versa. Furthermore, many state legislators take the position that it is not the governor’s job to intrude on the turf of the legislature when it comes to drawing districting lines for the state senate or house. Of course, some districting schemes require a degree of cooperation between the two chambers, such as “nesting” house districts within state senate districts. This cooperation gets a little dicey when one chamber is controlled by the Democrats and the other by the Republicans. How each political party seeks to advance its po-


STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH litical interests varies. The issue is to determine the best way to waste the vote of the partisans of the other party. To do so requires a great deal of information about past turnout patterns and levels of political support given by party followers. For example, Democrats are well aware that Republican supporters typically turn out at higher levels than Democratic followers. Democrats thus can “waste” Republican votes by using election history information to identify areas with proven records of Republican voting patterns along with higher than average levels of voter turnout. This has created the cul-de-sac theory of districting where Democrats concentrate all the neighborhoods with gated communities and cul-de-sac street patterns in Republican districts. This approach was refined to the nth degree in Texas redistricting in the 1990s and was followed again this decade as the Texas Legislature worked unsuccessfully on state legislative districts. Republicans, on the other hand, find the use of racial and ethnic data most useful in locating potential Democratic voters. Here the approach is to pack potentially as many African-American or Hispanic minority voters into legislative districts so as to minimize the number of seats that the Democratic Party can win, while then spreading Republican supporters over the remaining districts. This approach was used effectively in the 1990s in Ohio where the Republican-dominated apportionment board drew state legislative districts by concentrating African-American populations at the highest possible levels in Democratic districts. Thus, the Republicans minimized the number of Democratic-leaning districts and produced a decade of Republican control of both chambers in Ohio. The Ohio Republicans also spent the decade fending off legal challenges by the Democrats to this approach of wasting minority Democratic voters (see the Quilter v. Voinovich cases of the 1990s). Since this approach was validated largely by the federal courts in the 1990s, state legislatures learned it might be legal to “waste” minority votes to achieve political gerrymandering. With the exception of Ohio, the state Democratic parties of the 1990s were more interested in cooperating with minority office holders who wanted potentially safe electoral districts than in fighting Republican efforts to pack minority populations in Democrat districts. But this all changed in the 2000 round of redistricting. During the 1990s, a number of political scientists explored the question of what level of minority population is necessary to equalize the opportunity of minority voters to elect candidates of choice to congressional and state legislative office. Invariably, this

research determined that a combination of cohesive minority group support along with white or “Anglo” voters would enable Democratic candidates to win congressional or state legislative office. And with regularity, the researchers determined that the appropriate minority population percentage was less than 50 percent and usually closer to 40 percent. This research gave ammunition to Democrats who argued that anything above those minority percentage levels constituted “packing” of minority populations and thus would minimize the opportunity of Democratic voters to elect Democrats. The author’s work for plaintiff interests in the Shaw type of cases in the 1990s demonstrated that Democratic candidates could count on various levels of white or “Anglo” cross-over votes and that these votes had to be taken into account in determining whether plans were narrowly tailored to advance compelling state interests. Thus, the Democrats learned that they had been mistaken in the 1990s to attempt to maximize minority populations in state legislative districts as the minority office-holders often argued should be the case. Of course, the Republican sweep in the 1994 elections, particularly in the South, brought home to the Democratic Party the consequences of minority population maximization as the Republicans scored big gains in state legislative elections. The two tables following this article have summarized the state conditions, litigation and final outcomes of the state senate and house redistrictings in 2001–2004 (see Tables A and B). These tables report whether there was any change in the number of seats after redistricting, whether the political conditions for redistricting was split or unified partisan control, whether the state adopted a plan that ended up being determined as valid, whether a suit was filed in state and/or federal courts, and if there was litigation, what the litigation’s outcome was. The data from these two tables are employed throughout the remainder of this article to exemplify trends and issues in the 2001– 2004 state legislative redistricting. In this latest round of state legislative redistricting, the Democrats reversed their approach because of the lessons learned during the 1990s. Now the lines of the partisan battle are quite clear. Democrats want an optimum percentage of minority populations in state legislative districts. Their goal is neither to waste too many Democratic votes nor to have so few Democrats that the districts might not elect Democrats. Thus, this optimum percentage had to be determined in each state before beginning the state legislative districting. In addition to the discussion of the partisan interThe Council of State Governments

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STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH ests at play in the redistricting of New Jersey, South Carolina, Virginia and Wisconsin discussed in the author’s article in the The Book of the States 2003, further evidence on the prevalence of partisanship is provided in McDonald (2004). In that article, McDonald categorizes the outcome of state legislative districting in the 50 states in terms of whether Democratic or Republican gerrymanders were achieved, whether the plan adopted was a bi-partisan incumbent protection plan, or whether the plan adopted had a neutral outcome. He found that in 27 states the plans adopted were either Democratic or Republican gerrymanders and in 17 of the other 23 states the outcomes were bi-partisan incumbent protection plans. Neutral outcomes were observed in only six states (McDonald, 2004: 386–388).

Is Retrogression a Problem Anymore? In the 16 states covered wholly or in part under Section 5 of the U.S. Voting Rights Act of 1965 (as amended in 1982), the state legislature had to keep in mind the opportunity of minority voters to elect candidates of choice when redrawing state legislative district lines. The legal standard under the Reno v. Bossier Parish School Board (528 U.S. 320, 1999) case is that the minority group must not be deprived of the opportunity to elect candidates of choice when the previous plan permitted the group’s voters to elect candidates of choice. This interpretation means that the percentage of the minority group population in a proposed district can be reduced only if the reduction does not make the group’s voters unable to elect their preferred candidate. The exact parameters of the Section 5 standard of retrogression is determined by the Voting Section of the Department of Justice (DOJ) unless the state elects to seek pre-clearance from the U.S. District Court of the District of Columbia. The evidence on DOJ interpretation of the retrogression standard during this round shows that most of the state legislative plans adopted in the 16 covered jurisdictions received pre-clearance. DOJ only objected to the Florida House plan, the Georgia Senate plan, and the Texas House plan. In the case of the Louisiana House plan, the DOJ voting section fought an attempt by the Louisiana House to gain pre-clearance from the District Court of the District of Columbia. After one adverse federal court decision, the Louisiana House settled with the DOJ by redrawing several districts in the New Orleans area. The revised plan then received pre-clearance under Section 5. Thus, the 16 states were largely able to meet the legal requirements of Section 5 under Reno v. Bossier Parish School Board without much diffi118

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culty. This left the battle over advancing minority voting rights to private plaintiffs that brought Section 2 lawsuits in several states seeking to enhance minority voting rights.

Final Trends in the 2000 Redistricting Round Whereas the plans of the 1990s increased the representation of racial and ethnic minority interests within state legislatures, little evidence was found of similar gains in this redistricting round. There are several reasons for this conclusion. First, in the 16 states covered wholly or in part by Section 5 of the U.S. Voting Rights Act (VRA), the concept of retrogression limited further gains in minority representation. The result of such efforts was a preservation of the status quo in racial or ethnic representation in those states. Second, the main plaintiffs in Section 2 litigation against state legislative plans this round came from Latino interests not African-American interests. The burden of proof for Latino interests was difficult because high percentages of non-citizen population had to be taken into account in assessing Latino plaintiff claims. The experience in the two challenges already brought to the Texas Senate and House plans illustrated how difficult it was for Latino interests to gain additional districts that were not created by the state legislative plans. Third, in states with significant numbers of both AfricanAmerican and Latino populations, the continuing desire for African-American and Latino interests to gain separate places at the table of representation limited the number of occasions which existed to create combined majority-minority districts. Since these two groups seem to vote together in general elections, those who wished to create combined majority-minority districts had to demonstrate that the two groups also supported the same candidates in primary elections. Here the evidence continued to be very mixed in the parts of the country where these conditions exist. Thus, there were few gains in racial and ethnic diversity in the state legislatures of the 2000s. A major exception to the trend just elaborated occurred in the Massachusetts House districting and the South Dakota Senate and House districting. In Massachusetts, the Democratic Party majorities in the Senate and House were sufficient to permit the legislature to devise its own plans without any gubernatorial involvement. The plan proposed by a joint committee on redistricting and reapportionment proposed the creation of one additional House district with an African-American voting age population majority; however, a floor amendment undid the cre-


STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH ation of the African-American majority district and the plan finally adopted was a status quo plan in terms of minority group representation. Both AfricanAmerican and Latino voters brought separate actions in federal court challenging the adopted House plan on the basis of each minority group being “cracked” between and “packed” within several districts in the Boston area. Both African-American and Latino interests sought to get the court to order additional House districts with effective African-American and Latino population majorities. The court found African-American voters to be under represented in the 2001 House plan and ordered the state legislature to redraw the districts in the Boston area to provide additional African-American representation. On the other hand, the court did not find under representation of Latino voters in the 2001 House plan and upheld the plan in terms of Latino representation. Thus, the redrawn plan for the Massachusetts House enhances African-American representation while keeping Latino representation the same as in adopted plan of 2001. In South Dakota, the state legislature in 2001 was in the hands of a Republican majority in both chambers with a Republican governor. South Dakota House districts from which two members are elected at-large are usually the same as the Senate districts, with the exception of one Senate district that has been divided into two single-member districts to enhance the chances of Native American representation in the House. The plan adopted by the state in late 2001 maintained the status quo in Native American representation and Native American voter interests then sued in federal court alleging a need for Section 5 pre-clearance under the VRA and that the plan violated Section 2 of the VRA for under representing Native American voters. Initially, the Federal court found that submission of the state legislative redistricting plan was required under Section 5 of the VRA and ordered the state legislature to submit it to the DOJ. The DOJ approved the plan concluding that the plan did not result in the retrogression of Native American voter interests. In the Section 2 lawsuit, the plaintiffs alleged that the state legislature packed Native American persons of voting age into one Senate and three House districts and that alternatively the Legislature could have adopted a plan that enhanced Native American representation in both the Senate and the House. The federal court in September 2004 agreed with the Native American plaintiff allegations and ordered the state legislature to redraw the Senate and House districts with an eye toward enhancing Native American representation in the

South Dakota Legislature. If this round displayed less consciousness of race and ethnicity in districting, does this mean that the states have ended the practice of constructing noncompact and bizarrely shaped legislative districts? No evidence exists that the plans adopted in this round are any less bizarre in shape than the plans that are being replaced. In this round, however, the bizarrely shaped districts have more to do with partisan considerations than with racial and ethnic considerations. The technology of redistricting now makes it easy to construct districts based on the partisan predispositions of the voters and a number of states have invested in the technology to enable them to do so. Since the courts now typically hold that an absence of geographic compactness may be evidence of impermissible race consciousness in districting, the states simply have to respond that they followed partisan preferences when drawing bizarrely shaped districts, not racial factors. The legal challenges of the 2000 round to partisan gerrymandering have fallen mostly on deaf ears from the state and/or federal courts. The most prominent legal development of this decade has been the resurgence of challenges in state rather than in federal courts. Overall, this decade witnessed fewer court challenges in all with a total of 23 senate and 24 house plans challenged (contrast this experience with that of the previous decade when a total of 27 senate and 30 house plans were challenged, see Weber 1995). In this decade a majority of the plaintiffs sought relief in state courts because the federal courts must now defer to the state courts if the parties wish to be in state court (see Growe v. Emison, 507 U.S. 25, 1993). The need to litigate in state court did not usually delay the final resolution of the disputes at a time when the states were racing to meet candidate qualification deadlines for primary and general elections. The author had expected delays and competition between litigants to find the most favorable forum to hear their disputes. The only prominent exception to the general trend occurred in Texas, where the state court process yielded no state plans at all for the state Senate and House, leaving the final resolution to be handled by a three-judge panel of the federal court. In the end, state legislative districting plans were reviewed by federal courts in Alabama, California, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, West Virginia and Wisconsin, with either state senate or house plans being invalidated or drawn by the courts in Florida, Georgia, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, South CaroThe Council of State Governments

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STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH lina, South Dakota, Texas and Wisconsin. On the other hand, state courts were involved in reviewing state legislative plans in Alaska, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Idaho, Illinois, Kansas, Maine, Maryland, Minnesota, Montana, New Hampshire, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Texas and Virginia. In 11 of those 18 states, the state court invalidated, ordered the redrawing, or redrew state senate or house plans. In the final analysis, legal challenges were found in the current round to be less successful than in the previous decade as the state legislatures more effectively justified the decisions they made in redrawing district lines. One of the new trends opened up in state court review of adopted or proposed state legislative plans involved the potential electoral competitiveness of the districts. This issue took on prominence in the consideration and adoption of plans by state courts in Arizona and Minnesota. In Arizona, the redistricting process for state legislative districts had been turned over to the Arizona Independent Redistricting Commission (AIRC) as a result of voter adoption an initiative, Proposition 106, in the 2000 general election. After development and adoption of the state legislative plan in 2001, the initial plan was challenged in state court by Latino and Native American plaintiffs. The plaintiffs sought to revise the plan to create more politically competitive districts while continuing to protect the voting rights of minority persons. Initially, the state court deferred trial on the merits of the case until after the 2002 general elections and permitted the AIRC plan to be used in those elections. After trial, a Superior Court Judge in Maricopa County in mid January 2004 found for the plaintiffs and ordered the AIRC to revise the state legislative districts in time for the 2004 elections. The court ruled the plan violated the state’s constitution by not giving enough consideration to the creation of electorally competitive districts. The AIRC then took action about one month later to revise the district map to create additional electorally competitive districts and the state court approved the revised plan in April 2004. However, a state appeals court stayed the order of the lower court and approved the plan employed in 2002 for use in the 2004 elections. Thus, a combination of having an independent commission create the map along with a lower state court that was willing to enforce state constitutional criteria regarding electoral competitiveness kept in play a plan that heightened the extent of electoral competitiveness when compared to the plan it replaced. A second state where the process put a renewed emphasis on the electoral competitiveness of state 120

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legislative districts was Minnesota. There the state legislature, due to partisan differences between the two chambers, was unable to pass a state legislative plan by the statutory deadline of March 19, 2002. In anticipation of a partisan impasse, the Minnesota Supreme Court appointed a five-judge special redistricting panel and ordered them to release a redistricting plan only in the event a legislative redistricting plan was not adopted in a timely manner. When the deadline for legislative action expired, the special redistricting panel promulgated a plan for state Senate and House districts. Although the adopted plan was not governed by any explicit goal of fostering electoral competition, the employment of strict technical criteria related to population equality, contiguity, compactness, and the splitting of political sub-divisions resulted in a plan that created a larger number of districts without incumbents or paired incumbents. Thus, a larger number of open seat elections in electorally competitive districts occurred as a result of the Minnesota court-ordered plan devised by experts. Next, there is the decades old problem of meeting the one-person, one-vote equal protection standard and other state constitutional criteria in state legislative districting. Several states were challenged in this round as they attempted to deal with meeting the oneperson, one-vote equal protection standard and other criteria. And, for the most part state plans were not invalidated upon court review in terms of one-person, one-vote or other technical criteria challenges. Only in Alaska, Colorado, Georgia, Idaho, Maryland and North Carolina were plans invalidated on population or technical criteria with the courts ordering the redrawing or drawing of the plans themselves. The most interesting case comes from Georgia (Larios v. Cox, 300 F. Supp. 2d 1320 (ND Ga. 2004)) where a three-judge federal court panel invalidated the state Senate and House plans on the basis of a one-person, one-vote challenge. The state legislature in formulating and revising the plans in 2001 and 2002 had assumed that a plus or minus 5 percent overall population deviation was a safe harbor in meeting the spirit of one-person, one-vote. However, plaintiffs attacked the plan and proved that state legislature had adopted “a deliberate and systematic policy of favoring rural and inner city interests at the expense of suburban areas north, east, and west of Atlanta.” (300 F. Supp. 2d 1320, 1327 (ND Ga. 2004)). Furthermore, the court found that the state showed “an intentional effort to allow incumbent Democrats to maintain or increase their delegation,


STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH primarily by systematically underpopulating the districts held by incumbent Democrats, by overpopulating those of Republicans, and by deliberately pairing numerous Republican incumbents against one another.” (Larios v. Cox, at 1329). The court held that these actions violated the principle of one-person, one-vote because while each district deviation was within a permissible range (9.98 percent), there were no legitimate policies offered to justify these deviations. The U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the lower court decision and after the state legislature was unable to draw new lines, court-appointed experts drew new maps that the court approved. The Georgia example shows that if state legislatures believe that plus or minus 5 percent overall population deviation is a safe harbor, they will have to be more careful than the Georgia legislature in justifying the reasons for the population deviations. Other state legislatures did so during this past round; however, given the precision of current computer technology and the availability of block level population data, population deviations beyond minimum levels are going to be subject to continued challenges based on the experience of Georgia in 2004. This article also assesses the overall success of state reapportionment boards and commissions in shaping state legislative districting plans. A total of 12 states employed either a partisan or non-partisan board or commission in the development and adoption of state legislative plans, with five other states employing boards or commissions if the state legislature was unable to adopt a plan. Most of these commissions are set up to have members of both political parties represented, but the process of choosing a commission chair or tie-breaker creates a partisan advantage for one or the other party. Several of the state commissions were more likely to produce bipartisan plans as they require a super-majority of the commission to adopt plans, along with state supreme court validation and/or super-majorities of the legislature to approve the plans. Thus, most of the plans adopted by state reapportionment boards or commissions do show partisan outcomes. Only a few states such as Arizona, Hawaii, Iowa, Maine and Washington seem to be operating the most neutral processes for drawing state legislative districts at the present time. Finally, the partisanship surrounding state legislative districting processes of the current round has spurred a renewed interest in citizen initiatives to create less partisan reapportionment boards and commissions in states without them at the present time. As of this writing, there are uncoordinated campaigns

to reform state legislative districting processes in at least eight states, including California, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Rhode Island. What proponents of change are suggesting is that states adopt board or commission forms such as that currently employed in Arizona or something akin to the neutral process employed by Iowa. This campaign for change has taken on new emphasis with the proposal coming from Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger of California to replace the state legislature of that state as the redistricting body with a panel of retired judges. The governor is planning to push this idea in a voter initiative geared to getting a new process and state legislative plans in place by the elections of 2006 (see Nagourney, The New York Times, February 7, 2005 and Frank, Time Magazine, January 6, 2005). In those states with the citizen initiative a possible fire-storm beginning in California may lead to fundamental reforms in the redistricting processes of other states in an attempt to dampen the partisanship of the state processes. Thus, the future political and legal terrain faced by state legislative redistricters will continue to be complex and multi-faceted. One would expect that occasionally in the future legislatively adopted plans can be successfully attacked. However, the experience of state legislatures in the latest round should provide an overall pattern for state legislative redistricters to weather the terrain and successfully create plans in the future.

References Butler, David and Bruce Cain. Congressional Redistricting: Comparative and Theoretical Perspectives. New York: Macmillan, 1992. Cunningham, Maurice T. 2001. Maximization, Whatever the Cost: Race, Redistricting, and the Department of Justice. Westport, CT: Praeger. Frank, Mitch. “Arnold vs. the Gerrymanders.” Time Magazine. January 6, 2005. Griffith, Benjamin E. March 1999. “Redistricting in the Post-Shaw World,” National Conference of State Legislatures Redistricting Seminar, Denver, Colorado. Lublin, David and D. Stephen Voss. “Racial Redistricting and Realignment in Southern State Legislatures.” American Journal of Political Science 44: October 2000, 792–810. McDonald, Michael P. “A Comparative Analysis of Redistricting Institutions in the United States, 2001–02.” State Politics and Policy Quarterly 4: Winter 2004, 371–395. Nagourney, Adam. February 7, 2005. “States See Growing Campaign to Change Redistricting Laws,” New York Times.

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STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH Wattson, Peter S. “How to Draw Redistricting Plans that will Stand Up in Court.” National Conference of State Legislatures Redistricting Seminar, Denver, Colorado, March 1999. Weber, Ronald E. “Redistricting and the Courts: Judicial Activism in the 1990s.” American Politics Quarterly 23: April 1995, 204–28. Weber, Ronald E. “State Legislative Redistricting in 2001–2002: Emerging Trends and Issues in Reapportionment,” in Keon S. Chi, ed. The Book of the States 2002, Vol. 34. Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2002, 233–38. Weber, Ronald E. “Trends and Issues in State Legislative Redistricting.” in Keon S. Chi, ed., The Book of the States 2003, Vol. 35. Lexington, KY: The Council of State

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Governments, 2003, 100–107. Weber, Ronald E.. “Trends in State Legislative Districting.” Spectrum: The Journal of State Government 75: Winter 2002, 13–15.

About the Author Ronald E. Weber is the Wilder Crane Professor of Government at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. He has edited or written several books and has published numerous scholarly articles. He is also president of Campaign and Opinion Research Analysts Inc., a governmental and political consulting firm.


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Table A: State Conditions and Litigation Affecting State Senate Redistricting in the 2000s (n = 50) State

Seat Split change control

Valid Suit(s) plan filed

Litigation outcome

Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................

0 0

Y Y

Y Y

N Y

U O

Arkansas ............................. California ............................ Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Y N N Y Y N N

Y Y N Y Y Y N

N Y N N N Y Y

N U O N N U O

Hawaii ................................. Idaho ....................................

0 0

N N

Y N

N Y

N O

Illinois ..................................

0

Y

Y

Y

U

Indiana ................................ Iowa ..................................... Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................ Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ...........................

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Y Y N Y Y N N Y N Y

Y Y Y Y Y N N Y Y N

N N N N N N Y N N Y

N N U N N CP CP N N CP

Mississippi ..........................

0

N

Y

Y

P

Missouri .............................. Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire ..................

0 0 0 0 0

Y N Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y N

N Y N N N

N U N N CP

New Jersey .......................... New Mexico ........................

0 0

N Y

Y N

Y Y

U CP

New York .............................

+1

Y

Y

Y

U

North Carolina ...................

0

N

N

Y

O

North Dakota ..................... Ohio ..................................... Oklahoma ........................... Oregon .................................

-2 0 0 0

N N Y Y

Y Y Y N

N N N Y

N N N CP

Pennsylvania ......................

0

N

Y

Y

U

Rhode Island ......................

-12

Y

Y

Y

S

South Carolina ................... South Dakota ......................

0 0

Y N

N Y

Y Y

CP O

Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont .............................. Virginia ...............................

0 0 0 0 0

Y Y N N Y

Y N Y Y Y

N Y N N Y

N U N N U

Washington ......................... West Virginia ......................

0 0

N N

Y Y

N Y

N D

Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

0 0

Y N

N Y

Y N

CP N

Source: Ronald E. Weber Key: Y—Yes

D—Court dismissed suit. N—No S—Suit settled.

Comment State court automatically approved and upheld plan. State court disapproved 2001 plan and ordered state commission to redraw plan. Redrawn plan approved by state court. State-adopted plan upheld by federal court against Hispanic challenge. State court disapproved original plan and approved revised plan. State court automatically reviewed and upheld plan. After DOJ objected, state revised plan. Federal court disapproved revised plan on “one-person, one-vote” grounds and court redrew plan. State court twice rejected commission plan, ordered new plan to be drawn up. State court upheld compactness challenge; federal court upheld state plan from minority challenge. State court automatically reviewed and upheld plan. State court drew plan after state commission failed to draw plan. State court declared plan unconstitutional; drew and adopted own plan. State court imposed own plan due to inability of legislature to agree on a plan. African-American challenge based on racial gerrymandering pending in federal court. State court upheld plan in challenge brought by secretary of state. State court imposed own plan because legislature failed to enact plan by deadline. Minority challenge resulted in federal court upholding plan. State court imposed own plan because of gubernatorial veto of legislative plan. Hispanic challenge based on packing and cracking of miority voters dismissed by federal court. State court disapproved plan and ordered state legislature to redraw. DOJ and court approved new districts.

State court imposed corrected plan because state plan used incorrect census data. State adopted plan upheld by state court against “one-person, one-vote” and compactness challenges. African-American challenge in federal court resulted in redrawn districts to settle challenge. Federal court imposed plan after governor vetoed state plan. Federal court disapproved plan due to Native American challenge and ordered state legisature to redraw districts. Minority challenge resulted in federal court upholding plan. State Supreme Court upheld plan rejected by lower court for racial and partisan gerrymandering Federal court dismissed complaint from members of legislature claiming violation of equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. Senate challenge resulted in federal court-drawn plan.

O—Court overnturned plan. CP—Court imposed its own plan. U—Court upheld plan.

The Council of State Governments

123


STATE LEGISLATIVE BRANCH

Table B: State Conditions and Litigation Affecting State House Redistricting in the 2000s (n = 49) State

Seat Split change control

Valid Suit(s) plan filed

Litigation outcome

Alabama ..............................

0

N

Y

Y

D

Alaska ..................................

0

Y

N

Y

O

Arizona ................................

0

Y

Y

Y

O

Arkansas ............................. California ............................ Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida .................................

0 0 0 0 0 0

Y N N Y Y N

Y Y Y Y Y Y

N N N N N Y

N N U N N CP

Georgia ................................

0

N

Y

Y

O

Hawaii ................................. Idaho ...................................

0 0

N N

Y N

N Y

N O

Illinois ..................................

0

Y

Y

Y

U

Indiana ................................ Iowa ..................................... Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................ Massachusetts ....................

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Y Y N Y Y N N Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y

N N N N Y Y Y Y

N N U N S U CP O

Michigan ............................. Minnesota ............................ Mississippi .......................... Missouri .............................. Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire ..................

0 0 0 0 0

N Y N Y N

Y N Y Y Y

N Y N N Y

N CP N N U

0 0

Y Y

Y N

N N

N CP

New Jersey .......................... New Mexico ........................

0 0

N Y

Y N

Y Y

U CP

New York ............................. North Carolina ...................

0 0

Y N

Y N

N Y

N O

North Dakota ..................... Ohio ..................................... Oklahoma ........................... Oregon .................................

-4 0 0 0

N N Y Y

Y Y Y N

N N N Y

N N N CP

Pennsylvania ......................

0

N

Y

Y

U

Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ................... South Dakota ......................

-25 0 0

Y Y N

Y N Y

N Y Y

N CP O

Tennessee ............................ Texas ....................................

0 0

Y Y

Y N

N Y

N O

Utah ..................................... Vermont .............................. Virginia ...............................

0 0 0

N N Y

Y Y Y

N N Y

N N U

Washington ......................... West Virginia ......................

0 0

N N

Y Y

N Y

N D

Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

0 0

Y Y

N Y

Y N

CP N

Source: Ronald E. Weber Key: Y—Yes

D—Court dismissed suit. N—No S—Suit settled.

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Comment After DOJ preclearance, challenge of racial gerrymandering dismissed by federal court. Challenge to partisan gerrymandering upheld by state court which ordered a revised plan; revised plan upheld by state supreme court. State court disapproved 2001 plan and ordered state commission to redraw plan. Redrawn plan approved by state court. State court automatically reviewed and upheld plan. State court automatically reviewed and upheld plan; federal court approved minor adjustments to state plan due to DOJ objection. After federal court granted preclearance, “one-person, one-vote” challenge upheld by federal court. Federal court redrew plan. State court twice rejected commission plan, ordered new plan to be drawn up. State court upheld compactness challenge; federal court upheld state plan from minority challenge. State court automatically reviewed and upheld plan. Preclearance suit settled with state altering plan. State court upheld plan against compactness and contiguity challenges. State court declared plan unconstitutional; drew and adopted own plan. Federal court disapproved plan based on African-American challenge. State altered plan and federal court approved. State court imposed plan due to inability of legislature to agree on a plan. State court upheld plan in challenge brought by secretary of state. State court imposed own plan because legislature failed to enact plan by deadline. Minority challenge resulted in federal court decision to uphold plan. State court imposed own plan because of gubernatorial veto of legislative plan. State court disapproved plan and ordered state legislature to redraw. DOJ and court approved new districts.

State court imposed corrected plan because state plan used incorrect census data. State adopted plan upheld by state court against “one-person, one-vote” and compactness challenges. Federal court imposed plan after governor vetoed state plan. Federal court disapproved plan due to Native American challenge and ordered state legisature to redraw districts. Minority challenge caused federal court to make minor adjustments to state plan due to DOJ objection. State Supreme Court upheld plan rejected by lower court for racial and partisan gerrymandering Federal court dismissed complaint from members of legislature claiming violation of equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment. Senate challenge resulted in federal court-drawn plan.

O—Court overnturned plan. CP—Court imposed its own plan. U—Court upheld plan.


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.1 NAMES OF STATE LEGISLATIVE BODIES AND CONVENING PLACES State or other jurisdiction

Upper house

Lower house

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Legislature Legislature Legislature General Assembly Legislature

Both bodies

Senate Senate Senate Senate Senate

House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives Assembly

State House State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

General Assembly General Assembly General Assembly Legislature General Assembly

Senate Senate Senate Senate Senate

House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives

State Capitol State Capitol Legislative Hall The Capitol State Capitol

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Legislature Legislature General Assembly General Assembly General Assembly

Senate Senate Senate Senate Senate

House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives

State Capitol State Capitol State House State House State Capitol

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Legislature General Assembly Legislature Legislature General Assembly

Senate Senate Senate Senate Senate

House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Delegates

State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State House State House

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

General Court Legislature Legislature Legislature General Assembly

Senate Senate Senate Senate Senate

House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives

State House State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

Legislature Legislature Legislature General Court Legislature

Senate (a) Senate Senate Senate

House of Representatives Assembly House of Representatives General Assembly

State Capitol State Capitol Legislative Building State House State House

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Legislature Legislature General Assembly Legislative Assembly General Assembly

Senate Senate Senate Senate Senate

House of Representatives Assembly House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives

State Capitol State Capitol State Legislative Building State Capitol State House

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Legislature Legislative Assembly General Assembly General Assembly General Assembly

Senate Senate Senate Senate Senate

House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives

State Capitol State Capitol Main Capitol Building State House State House

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Legislature General Assembly Legislature Legislature General Assembly

Senate Senate Senate Senate Senate

House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives

State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State House

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

General Assembly Legislature Legislature Legislature Legislature

Senate Senate Senate Senate Senate

House of Delegates House of Representatives House of Delegates Assembly (b) House of Representatives

State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

Council of the District of Columbia Legislature Legislature Legislature Legislative Assembly Legislature

(a) Senate (a) Senate Senate (a)

House of Representatives House of Representatives House of Representatives

Convening place

Council Chamber Maota Fono Congress Building Civic Center Building The Capitol Capitol Building

Source: The Council of State Governments, Directory I—Elective Officials 2005. (a) Unicameral legislature. Except in Dist. of Columbia, members go by the title Senator. (b) Members of the lower house go by the title Representative.

The Council of State Governments

125


126

The Book of the States 2005 Jan.

Annual

(y)

Michigan .............................

Minnesota ...........................

See footnotes at end of table.

Annual

Biennial

(l)(m)

Maine ...................................

Maryland ............................

Annual

Louisiana ............................

Massachusetts ....................

Annual

Annual

Kansas .................................

Annual

Iowa .....................................

Kentucky .............................

Annual

Annual

Illinois ..................................

Indiana ................................

Annual

Annual

Hawaii .................................

Idaho ....................................

Jan.

Annual

Georgia ................................

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Dec. Jan.

Mar. (o) Apr. (n)

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Mar.

Jan.

Annual

Annual

Jan. Feb.

Delaware .............................

Annual

Connecticut .........................

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan. Mar. Feb.

Month

Florida .................................

(l)

Annual

California ............................

Biennialodd year

Arkansas .............................

Colorado .............................

Annual

Annual

Alaska ..................................

Alabama ..............................

Arizona ................................

Year

Annual

State or other jurisdiction

Table 3.2 LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS: LEGAL PROVISIONS Regular sessions

Tues. after 1st Mon. (n)

2nd Wed.

1st Wed.

2nd Wed.

1st Wed. (b) Wed. after 1st Tues. (o)

last Mon. (o) last Mon. (n)

1st Tues after 1st Mon.

2nd Mon.

2nd Mon.

2nd Mon. (d)(t)

2nd Wed.

Mon. on or nearest 9th day

3rd Wed.

2nd Mon.

1st Tues. after 1st Mon.

2nd Tues.

Wed. after 1st Mon. (n) Wed. after 1st Mon. (o)

No later than 2nd Wed.

1st Mon. (d)

2nd Mon.

2nd Mon.

2nd Mon.

2nd Tues. (b) 1st Tues. (c)(d) 1st Tues. (e)

Day

Legislature convenes

120 L or 1st Mon. after 3rd Sat. in May (y)

None

(w)

90 C

3rd Wed. of June 3rd Wed. of April

even-60 L in 85 C; odd-45 L in 60 C

odd-30 L even-60 L

odd-None; even-90 C (h)

odd- 110 C even—100 C

odd-61 C or Apr. 29; even-30 C or Mar. 14

None

None

60 L (h)

40 L

60 C (h)

June 30

(p)

120 C

None

60 C (h)

(i)

121 C

30 L in 105 C

Limitation on length of session (a) Legislature may call

No

No

By petition (x)

By petition, majority, each house

By petition, majority, each house

By petition, majority, each house

No

Petition to governor of 2/3 members, each house

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

No

Joint call, presiding officers, both houses

No

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

By petition, 3/5 members, each house

Joint call, presiding officers, both houses or

Joint call, presiding officers, both houses

By petition, 2/3 members, each house (q) Joint call, presiding officers, both houses

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

No

No

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

No

Yes

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes (g)

No

Yes

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes (g)

No

No (j)

Yes

Yes

Yes (f)

Legislature may determine subject

Special sessions

None

None

None

30 C

None

30 C

None

None

None

30 L or 40 C

None

20 C

30 L (h)

40 L

20 C (h)

None

None

None

None

None

None

30 C

12 L in 30 C

Limitation on length of session

STATE LEGISLATURES


Jan. Jan.

Biennial

Annual

Annual

Biennial— odd year

South Carolina ...................

South Dakota ......................

Tennessee ............................

Texas ....................................

Jan.

The Council of State Governments

See footnotes at end of table.

Annual (gg)

Wisconsin ............................

Jan.

Annual

Annual

Washington .........................

West Virginia ......................

Jan.

Annual

Virginia ...............................

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Annual

Annual

Utah .....................................

Vermont ..............................

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

(dd)

Annual

Jan.

Pennsylvania ......................

Biennialodd year

Oregon .................................

Feb.

Jan. (n)

Jan.

Jan.

Jan. (kk)

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Feb.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Jan.

Month

Rhode Island ......................

(s)

Annual

Biennialodd year

North Dakota .....................

Ohio .....................................

(y)

North Carolina ...................

Oklahoma ...........................

Annual

Annual

New Mexico ........................

New York .............................

Annual

Annual

New Hampshire ..................

New Jersey ..........................

Annual

Biennialodd year

Nebraska .............................

Biennialodd year

Montana ..............................

Nevada .................................

Annual

Annual

Mississippi ..........................

Missouri ..............................

Year

State or other jurisdiction

1st Mon. (n)

2nd Wed.

2nd Mon.

2nd Wed.

Wed. after 1st Mon.

3rd. Mon.

2nd Tues.

(bb)

2nd Tues.

2nd Tues.

1st. Tues.

1st Tues.

2nd Mon.

1st Mon.

1st Mon. (ee)

Tues. after Jan. 3, but not later than Jan. 11

3rd Wed. after 2nd Mon. (n)

Wed. after 1st Mon.

3rd Tues.

2nd Tues.

Wed. after 1st Tues.

1st Mon.

Wed. after 1st Mon.

1st Mon.

Wed. after 1st Mon.

Tues. after 1st Mon.

Day

Legislature convenes

Regular sessions

LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS: LEGAL PROVISIONS — Continued

None

60 C (h)

odd—105 C; even—60 C

odd—30 C (h); even—60 C (h)

None

45 C

140 C

90 L (u)

odd-40 L; even-35 L

None

None

None

None

last Fri. in May

None

80 L

None

None

odd-60 C; even-30 C

None

45 L

120 C

odd-90 L; even-60 L

90 L

May 30

125 C (z); 90C (z)

Limitation on length of session (a)

By petition, majority members each house

By petition, 3/5 members, each house

By vote, 2/3 members, each house

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

No

(cc)

No

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

By vote, 2/3 members, each house

Joint call, presiding officers, both house

By petition, majority each house

By petition, majority, each house

By vote, 2/3 members, each house

Joint call, presiding officers, both houses

Yes (ff)

By petition, 3/5 members, each house

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

By petition, 3/5 members, each house

By petition, majority, each house

By petition, 2/3 members, each house

No

By petition, 2/3 members

By petition, majority, each house

By petition, 3/4 members, each house

No

Legislature may call

No

Yes (g)

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

No

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes

No

Yes

Yes (g)

Yes

Yes

Yes

Yes (g)

Yes (g)

Yes

Yes

No

Yes

Yes

Yes (g)

No

Legislature may determine subject

Special sessions

None

None

30 C

None

None

None

30 C

30 L (u)

None

None

None

None

None

None

None

None

None

None

30 C

None

15 L (r)

None (k)

None

None

30 C (aa)

None

Limitation on length of session

STATE LEGISLATURES

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128

The Book of the States 2005

Annual

U.S. Virgin Islands ............. Jan.

Jan. 3rd Mon.

2nd day

2nd Mon.

2nd Mon. 4 mo.

(d)(jj)

2nd Mon. (ii)

2nd Mon. 45 L

Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003 and October 2004. Note: Some legislatures will also reconvene after normal session to consider bills vetoed by governor. Connecticut—if governor vetoes any bill, secretary of state must reconvene General Assembly on second Monday after the last day on which governor is either authorized to transmit or has transmitted every bill with his objections, whichever occurs first: General Assembly must adjourn sine die not later than three days after its reconvening. Hawaii—legislature may reconvene on 45th day after adjournment sine die, in special session, without call. Louisiana—legislature meets in a maximum five-day veto session on the 40th day after final adjournment. Missouri—if governor returns any bill on or after the fifth day before the last day on which legislature may consider bills (in even-numbered years), legislature automatically reconvenes on first Wednesday following the second Monday in September for a maximum 10 C sessions. New Jersey—legislature meets in special session (without call or petition) to act on bills returned by governor on 45th day after sine die adjournment of the regular session; if the second year expires before the 45th day, the day preceding the end of the legislative year. Utah—if 2/3 of the members of each house favor reconvening to consider vetoed bills, a maximum five-day session is set by the presiding officers. Virginia—legislature reconvenes on sixth Wednesday after adjournment for a maximum three-day session (may be extended to seven days upon vote of majority of members elected to each house). Washington—upon petition of 2/3 of the members of each house, legislature meets 45 days after adjournment for a maximum five-day session. Key: C—Calendar day L—Legislative day (in some states called a session day or workday; definition may vary slightly, however, generally refers to any day on which either house of legislature is in session). (a) Applies to each year unless otherwise indicated. (b) General election year (quadrennial election year). (c) Year after quadrennial election. (d) Legal provision for organizational session prior to stated convening date. Alabama—in the year after quadrennial election, second Tuesday in January for 10 C. California—in the even-numbered general election year, first Monday in December for an organizational session, recess until the first Monday in January of the odd-numbered year. Indiana—third Tuesday after first Monday in November. No. Mariana Islands—in year after general election, second Monday in January. (e) Other years. (f) By 2/3 vote each house. (g) Only if legislature convenes itself. Special sessions called by the legislature are unlimited in scope in New Mexico.

Annual (v) Aug.

Puerto Rico .........................

(jj)

Jan.

Annual

Annual

Guam ...................................

No. Mariana Islands ..........

Jan. Jan. 2nd Mon.

(hh)

Annual July

Dist. of Columbia ...............

2nd Tues. (n)

Day

Legislature convenes

American Samoa ................

Month Jan. 3rd Mon. (o)

Year

Annual Feb.

Wyoming .............................

State or other jurisdiction

Regular sessions

LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS: LEGAL PROVISIONS — Continued

No

No

No

No

Yes (g)

No

No

Yes

Legislature may determine subject

Upon request of presiding officers, both houses

No

No

By petition, majority members each house

Legislature may call

Special sessions

None

20 C

10 C

None

None

20 L

Limitation on length of session

(h) Session may be extended by vote of members in both houses. Arkansas—2/3 vote. Florida—3/5 vote, session may be extended by vote of members in each house. Hawaii—petition of 2/3 membership for maximum 15-day extension. Kansas—2/3 vote. Virginia—2/3 vote for 30 C extension. West Virginia—may be extended by the governor. (i) No constitutional or statutory provision; however, legislative rules require that regular sessions adjourn no later than Saturday of the week during which the 100th day of the session falls. (j) After governor’s business has been disposed of, members may remain in session up to 15 C by a 2/3 vote of both houses. (k) No limit, however legislators are only paid up to 20 calendar days during a special session. (l) Regular sessions begin after general election, in December of even-numbered year. In California, legislature meets in December for an organizational session, recesses until the first Monday in January of the oddnumbered year and continues in session until Nov. 30 of next even-numbered year. In Maine, session which begins in December of general election year runs into the following year (odd-numbered); second session begins in next even-numbered year. (m) Second session limited to consideration of specific types of legislation. Maine—budgetary matters; legislation in the governor’s call; emergency legislation; legislation referred to committees for study. (n) Odd-numbered years. (o) Even-numbered years. (p) Odd-numbered years—not later than Wednesday after first Monday in June; even-numbered—years not later than Wednesday after first Monday in May. (q) Notice sent to secretary of state. (r) Limitation is on payment of legislative pay and mileage. (s) General Assembly meets during a two-year biennium that is divided into two annual regular sessions. (t) Legislators may reconvene at any time after organizational meeting; however, second Monday in January is the final date by which regular session must be in process. (u) Tennessee—Odd year, first half general assembly 45 legislative days; even year, second half general assembly 45 legislative days. (v) Legislature meets twice a year. During general election years, the legislature only convenes on the January session. (w) Legislative rules say formal business must be concluded by Nov. 15th of the 1st session in the biennium, or by July 31st of the 2nd session for the biennium. (x) Joint rules provide for the submission of a written statement requesting special session by a specified number of members of each chamber.

None

5 mo.

90 L (jj)

None

45 L

None

odd—40 L; even—20 L; biennium—60 L

Limitation on length of session (a)

STATE LEGISLATURES


(y) Legal provision for session in odd-numbered year; however, legislature may divide, and in practice has divided, to meet in even-numbered years as well. (z) 90 C sessions every year, except the first year of a gubernatorial administration during which the legislative session runs for 125 C. (aa) 30 C if called by legislature; 60 C if called by governor. (bb) Commencement of regular session depends on concluding date of organizational session. Legislature meets, in odd-numbered year, on second Tuesday in January for a maximum 15 C organizational session, then returns on the Tuesday following the conclusion of the organizational session. (cc) Legislature may call itself into a veto override session. (dd) Sessions are two years and begin on the 1st Tuesday of January of the odd numbered year. Session ends on November 30 of the even numbered year. Each calendar year receives its own legislative number. (ee) Unless Monday is a legal holiday; in second year, the General Assembly convenes on the same date. (ff) Legislative Council may reconvene the Legislature assembly. However, a reconvened session may not exceed the number of days available (80) but not used by the last regular session.

LEGISLATIVE SESSIONS: LEGAL PROVISIONS — Continued (gg) The legislature, by joint resolution, establishes the session schedule of activity for the remainder of the biennium at the beginning of the odd-numbered year. (hh) Each Council period begins on January 2 of each odd-numbered year and ends on January 1 of the following odd-numbered year. (ii) Legislature meets on the first Monday of each month following its initial session in January. (jj) 60 L before April 1 and 30 L after July 31. (kk) Session officially begins on the first Wednesday following the first Monday of the new legislative term ( commencing the first of the year), and lasts until the legislature completes its business and adjourns sine die. However, over the past several years, both houses have adopted the tactic of declaring a recess at the call of the leaders, in order to facilitate easy recall of the legislature to override vetoes, etc. Over time the custom has become to formally adjourn both houses just before the new session opens; in the case of 2005, on January 7th. This leads to the rather interesting convention that when the governor calls the legislature into session, it is considered special or executive, even though the regular session is ongoing.

STATE LEGISLATURES

The Council of State Governments

129


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.3 THE LEGISLATORS: NUMBERS, TERMS, AND PARTY AFFILIATIONS: 2005 Senate State or other jurisdiction State and territory totals State totals .....................

House/Assembly

Democrats Republicans Other Vacancies Total Term Democrats Republicans 1,001 982 13 5 2,069* . . . 2,672 2,708 951 963 3 5 1,971* . . . 2,638 2,683

Senate and House/ Assembly Other Vacancies Total Term totals 24 9 5,501* . . . 7,570* 14 9 5,411* . . . 7,382*

Alabama ......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ........................... Arkansas ........................ California .......................

25 8 12 27 25

10 12 18 8 15

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

35 20 30 35 40

4 4 2 4 4

62 14 22 72 48

40 26 38 28 32

... ... ... ... ...

3 ... ... ... ...

105 40 60 100 80

4 2 2 2 2

140 60 90 135 120

Colorado ........................ Connecticut .................... Delaware ........................ Florida ............................ Georgia ...........................

18 24 13 14 22

17 12 8 26 34

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

35 36 21 40 56

4 2 4 4 2

35 99 15 36 80

30 52 25 84 99

... ... 1 (a) ... 1 (a)

... ... ... ... ...

65 151 41 120 180

2 2 2 2 2

100 187 62 160 236

Hawaii ............................ Idaho ............................... Illinois ............................. Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................

20 7 31 17 25

5 28 27 33 25

... ... 1 (a) ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

25 35 59 50 50

4 2 (b) 4 4

41 13 65 48 49

10 57 53 52 51

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

51 70 118 100 100

2 2 2 2 2

76 105 177 150 150

Kansas ............................ Kentucky ........................ Louisiana ....................... Maine .............................. Maryland .......................

10 15 24 19 33

30 22 15 16 14

... 1 (a) ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

40 38 39 35 47

4 4 4 2 4

42 57 67 76 98

83 43 37 73 43

... ... 1 (a) 2 (d) ...

... ... ... ... ...

125 100 105 151 141

2 2 4 2 4

165 138 144 186 188

Massachusetts ............... Michigan ........................ Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

34 16 35 (c) 28 10

6 22 31 24 22

... ... 1 (a) ... ...

... ... ... ... 2

40 38 67 52 34

2 4 4 4 4

136 52 66 (c) 75 66

21 58 68 47 97

... ... ... ... ...

3 ... ... ... ...

160 110 134 122 163

2 2 2 4 2

200 148 201 174 197

Montana ......................... Nebraska ........................ Nevada ............................ New Hampshire ............. New Jersey .....................

27 23 ... ... ---------Nonpartisan election------9 12 ... ... 8 16 ... ... 22 18 ... ...

50 49 21 24 40

4 4 4 2 4 (e)

49 50 1 (o) ... 99 2 ----------------------Unicameral--------------------------26 16 ... ... 42 2 147 250 ... 3 400 2 47 33 ... ... 80 2

149 49 63 424 120

New Mexico ................... New York ........................ North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ................................

24 28 29 15 11

18 34 21 32 22

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

42 62 50 47 33

4 2 2 4 4

42 104 63 27 40

28 46 57 67 59

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

70 150 120 94 99

2 2 2 4 2

112 212 170 141 132

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ............................ Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

26 18 18 33 20

22 12 29 5 26

... ... ... ... ...

... ... 3 ... ...

48 30 50 38 46

4 4 4 2 4

44 27 93 60 50

57 33 110 15 74

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

101 60 203 75 124

2 2 $ 2 2

149 90 253 113 170

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas ............................... Utah ................................ Vermont .........................

10 16 12 8 21

25 17 19 21 9

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

35 33 31 29 30

2 4 4 4 2

19 53 63 19 83

51 46 87 56 60

... ... ... ... 7 (f)

... ... ... ... ...

70 99 150 75 150

2 2 2 2 2

105 132 181 104 180

Virginia .......................... Washington .................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ....................... Wyoming ........................

16 26 21 14 7

24 23 13 19 23

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

40 49 34 33 30

4 4 4 4 4

38 55 68 39 14

60 43 32 60 46

2 (a) ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

100 98 100 99 60

2 2 2 2 2

140 147 134 132 90

Dist. of Columbia (g) .... American Samoa ........... Guam .............................. No. Mariana Islands ..... Puerto Rico ....................

11 1 1 (a) ... ---------Nonpartisan election------9 6 ... ... 1 4 4 (m) . . . 18(h) 8 (i) 1 (j) ...

13 18 15 9 28

4 4 2 4 4

------------------------Unicameral---------------------------------Nonpartisan election------21 (l) 2 ------------------------Unicameral------------------------2 7 9 (n) ... 18 2 32 (h) 18 (i) 1 (j) ... 51 4

13 39 15 27 79

U.S. Virgin Islands ........

11

15

2

------------------------Unicameral-------------------------

15

See footnotes at end of table.

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...

4 (k)

...


STATE LEGISLATURES

THE LEGISLATORS: NUMBERS, TERMS, AND PARTY AFFILIATIONS — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments, March 2005. * Note: Senate and combined body (Senate and House/Assembly) totals include Unicameral legislatures. Key: . . . - Does not apply (a) Independent (b) The entire Senate is up for election every 10 years, beginning in 1972. Senate districts are divided into three groups. One group elects senators for terms of four years, four years and two years; the second group for terms of four years, two years and four years; the third group for terms of two years, four years, and four years. (c) Democratic-Farmer-Labor.

(d) Unenrolled (1); Green Independent Party (1), (e) The first senatorial term at the beginning of each decade is two years. (f) Independent (1); Progressive (6). (g) Council of the District of Columbia. (h) New Progressive Party. (i) Popular Democratic Party. (j) Puerto Rico Independent Party. (k) Independent (2); Independent Citizens Movement (2). (l) 21 seats; 20 are elected by popular vote and one is an appointed, nonvoting delegate from Swains Island. (m) Independent (1); Covenant (3). (n) Covenant (8); Independent (1). (o) Constitution.

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131


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.3A THE LEGISLATORS: NUMBERS, TERMS, AND PARTY AFFILIATIONS BY REGION: 2005

Democrats Republicans

Other

Vacancies

Total

Term ...

Democrats

State totals ........

951

963

3

5

1,971*

Eastern Region Connecticut ........ Delaware ............ Maine ................. Massachusetts .... New Hampshire . New Jersey ......... New York ........... Pennsylvania ...... Rhode Island ...... Vermont .............. Regional total ....

24 13 19 34 8 22 28 18 33 21 220

12 8 16 6 16 18 34 29 5 9 165

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 0

... ... ... ... ... ... ... 3 ... ... 3

36 21 35 40 24 40 62 50 38 30 376

2 4 2 2 2 4 (e) 2 4 2 2 ...

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

59 50 50 40 38 67 49 47 33 35 33 501

(b) 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 2 4 ...

27 40 19 39 447

Midwestern Region Illinois ................ 31 27 1 (a) Indiana ............... 17 33 ... Iowa .................... 25 25 ... Kansas ................ 10 30 ... Michigan ............ 16 22 ... Minnesota .......... 35 (c) 31 1 (a) Nebraska ............ Nonpartisan election North Dakota ..... 15 32 ... Ohio .................... 11 22 ... South Dakota ..... 10 25 ... Wisconsin ........... 14 19 ... Region total ....... 184 266 2

Term

9

5,411*

...

7,382*

... 1 (a) 2 (d) ... ... ... ... ... ... 7 (f) 10

... ... ... 3 3 ... ... ... ... 6

151 41 151 160 400 80 150 203 75 150 1,561

2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 ...

187 62 186 200 424 120 21 253 113 180 1,937

... ... ... ... ... ...

118 100 100 125 110 134

2 2 2 2 2 2

67 59 51 60 602

... ... ... ... ... ... Unicameral ... ... ... ... 0

... ... ... ... 0

94 99 70 99 1,049

4 2 2 2 ...

177 150 150 165 148 201 49 141 132 105 132 1,550

House/Assembly

Senate State

Senate and House/ Assembly totals

Republicans Other Vacancies Total

2,638

2,683

99 15 76 136 147 47 104 93 60 83 818

52 25 73 21 250 33 46 110 15 60 729 53 52 51 83 58 68

65 48 49 42 52 66 (c)

14

Southern Region Alabama ............. Arkansas ............. Florida ................ Georgia ............... Kentucky ............ Louisiana ............ Maryland ............ Mississippi ......... Missouri ............. North Carolina ... Oklahoma ........... South Carolina ... Tennessee ........... Texas .................. Virginia .............. West Virginia ..... Region total .......

25 27 14 22 15 24 33 28 10 29 26 20 16 12 16 21 338

10 8 26 34 22 15 14 24 22 21 22 26 17 19 24 13 295

... ... ... ... 1 (a) ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 1

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 2 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 2

35 35 40 56 38 39 47 52 34 50 48 46 33 31 40 34 658

4 4 4 2 4 4 4 4 4 2 4 4 4 4 4 4 ...

62 72 36 80 57 67 98 75 66 63 44 50 53 63 38 68 992

40 28 84 99 43 37 43 47 97 57 57 74 46 87 60 32 931

... ... ... 1 (a) ... 1 (a) ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 2 (a) ... 4

3 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 3

105 100 120 180 100 105 141 122 163 120 101 124 99 150 100 100 1,930

4 2 2 2 2 4 4 4 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 ...

140 135 160 236 138 144 188 174 197 170 149 170 132 181 140 134 2,588

Western Region Alaska ................ Arizona ............... California ........... Colorado ............. Hawaii ................ Idaho .................. Montana ............. Nevada ............... New Mexico ....... Oregon ................ Utah .................... Washington ........ Wyoming ............ Regional total ....

8 12 25 18 20 7 27 9 24 18 8 26 7 209

12 18 15 17 5 28 23 12 18 12 21 23 23 227

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

20 30 40 35 25 35 50 21 42 30 29 49 30 436

4 2 4 4 4 2 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 ...

14 22 48 35 41 13 49 26 42 27 19 55 14 405

26 38 32 30 10 57 50 16 28 33 56 43 46 465

... ... ... ... ... ... 1 (g) ... ... ... ... ... ... 1

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 0

40 60 80 65 51 70 99 42 70 60 75 98 60 870

2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 ...

60 90 120 100 76 105 149 63 112 90 104 147 90 1,306

Source: The Council of State Governments, March 2005. * Note: Senate and combined body (Senate and House) totals include Nebraska’s unicameral legislature. Key: . . . - Does not apply (a) Independent. (b) The entire Senate is up for election every 10 years, beginning in 1972. Senate districts are divided into three groups. One group elects senators for

132

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terms of four years, four years and two years; the second group for terms of four years, two years and four years; the third group for terms of two years, four years, and four years. (c) Democratic-Farmer-Labor. (d) Unenrolled (3); Green Independent Party (1). (e) The first senatorial term at the beginning of each decade is two years. (f) Independent (3); Progressive (4). (g) Constitution.


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.4 MEMBERSHIP TURNOVER IN THE LEGISLATURES: 2004 Senate State or other jurisdiction

Total number of members

Number of membership changes

Alabama ............................. Alaska ................................. Arizona ............................... Arkansas ............................ California ...........................

35 20 30 35 40

1 2 8 1 9

Colorado ............................ Connecticut ........................ Delaware ............................ Florida ................................ Georgia ...............................

35 36 21 40 56

Hawaii ................................ Idaho ................................... Illinois ................................. Indiana ............................... Iowa ....................................

House/Assembly Percentage change of total

Total number of members

Number of membership changes

Percentage change of total

3% 10 27 3 23

105 40 60 100 80

4 10 20 40 24

4% 25 33 40 30

6 4 0 2 20

17 11 0 5 36

65 151 41 120 180

18 16 6 19 45

28 11 15 16 25

25 35 59 50 50

2 7 4 5 9

8 20 7 10 18

51 70 118 100 100

9 15 12 11 11

18 21 10 11 11

Kansas ................................ Kentucky ............................ Louisiana ........................... Maine .................................. Maryland ...........................

40 38 39 35 47

15 7 1 19 0

38 18 3 54 0

125 100 105 151 141

30 13 2 61 4

24 13 2 40 3

Massachusetts ................... Michigan ............................ Minnesota .......................... Mississippi ......................... Missouri .............................

40 38 67 52 34

6 0 1 3 11

15 0 1 6 32

160 110 134 122 163

12 35 26 1 39

8 32 19 1 24

Montana ............................. Nebraska ............................ Nevada ................................ New Hampshire ................. New Jersey .........................

50 49 21 24 40

16 8 4 6 0

32 16 19 25 0

New Mexico ....................... New York ............................ North Carolina .................. North Dakota .................... Ohio ....................................

42 62 50 47 33

6 4 12 2 6

14 6 24 4 21

70 150 120 94 99

10 17 24 11 18

14 11 20 12 18

Oklahoma .......................... Oregon ................................ Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... South Carolina ..................

48 30 50 38 46

22 6 2 3 8

46 20 4 8 17

101 60 203 75 124

43 19 13 14 17

43 32 6 19 14

South Dakota ..................... Tennessee ........................... Texas ................................... Utah .................................... Vermont .............................

35 33 31 29 30

14 4 2 3 5

40 12 6 10 17

70 99 150 75 150

23 14 17 16 32

33 14 11 21 21

Virginia .............................. Washington ........................ West Virginia ..................... Wisconsin ........................... Wyoming ............................

40 49 34 33 30

0 8 4 5 7

0 16 12 15 23

100 98 100 99 60

1 20 17 20 14

1 20 17 20 23

Dist. of Columbia .............. American Samoa ............... Guam .................................. No. Mariana Islands ......... Puerto Rico ........................ U.S. Virgin Islands ............

13 18 15 9 28 15

3 3 0 4 17 0

23 17 0 44 11 0

100 38 38 ..................................... Unicameral ..................................... 42 12 29 400 135 34 80 0 0

..................................... Unicameral ..................................... 21 1 5 ..................................... Unicameral ..................................... 18 9 50 51 22 43 ..................................... Unicameral .....................................

Source: The Council of State Governments, March 2005. Note: Turnover calculated after 2004 legislative elections.

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133


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21 21 25 21 18

25 18 24 21 21

18 21 21 21 21

18 24 18 21 21

18 21 18 21 24

18 U 21 18 21

21 18 21 18 18

21 21 21 18 21

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

See footnotes at end of table.

Minimum age

State or other jurisdiction

3 ... ★ 2 1 ★(c) 2 (c) 2 1 1 (c)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ 5 ...

1 U 1 (c) 2 (c) 2 (c) ★ 5 ... 1 30 days ★ ... 4 (c) 30 days ...

... U ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ... ... ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ 1 4 (c) ★

1 ★ 3 2 2 (c)

★ ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

3 (c) 3 3 2 3 (c)

State resident (years) (b)

House/Assembly

... ★ ★ ★ 3

U.S. citizen (years) (a)

Table 3.5 THE LEGISLATORS: QUALIFICATIONS FOR ELECTION

★ 1 1 30 days ★

★ 1 (h) 1 ★ 1

6 mo. (g) U 30 days (l) ★ 1

1 (d) 6 mo. 2 1

★ 1 1 3 mo. 6 mo. (f)

(d) 1 2 (e) 1 60 days

1 ★ 1 2 1

1 1 1 1 1

District resident (years)

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

25 21 25 18 25

25 18 25 18 18

18 21 21 30 30

18 21 21 25 30

★ ★ ★ ★ 2 ... U ★ ★ ★

18 30 18 25 25

18 21 21 25 25

25 18 27 21 25

25 25 25 25 18

Minimum age

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

Qualified voter (years)

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ★ 5 ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ★ 3

U.S. citizen (years) (a)

★ ... 4 (c) 30 days ...

★ 5 2 1 30 days

1 ★ 1 (c) 7 (c) 4 (c)

5 ★ 1 4 (c) ★

★(c) 6 (c) 2 1 1 (c)

3 ... ★ 2 ★

1 ★ 3 2 2 (c)

3 (c) 3 3 2 3 (c)

State resident (years) (b)

Senate

★ 1 1 30 days ★

★ 1 (h) 1 ★ 1

6 mo. (g) 1 30 days (l) ★ 1

★ (d) 6 mo. 2 1

★ 1 1 3 mo. 6 mo. (f)

(d) 1 2 (e) 1 60 days

1 ★ 1 2 1

1 1 1 1 1

District resident (years)

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ 4 3

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

Qualified voter (years)

STATE LEGISLATURES


21 21 21 25 18

21 18 18 18 21

U 25 U 21 25

21

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico .........................

U.S. Virgin Islands .............

U 5 U 3 2 ...

1 ★ 1 (c) 1 ★(c)

★ ★ 1 ★ ★ U ★(i) U ... ★

2 3 (c) 2 3 (c) 2

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

3

U 1 U (d) 1 (k)

★ (d) 1 (d) 1

★ 1 1 6 mo. 1

District resident (years)

Source: The Council of State Governments survey, October 2003 and October 2004. Note: Many state constitutions have additional provisions disqualifying persons from holding office if they are convicted of a felony, bribery, perjury or other infamous crimes. Key: U—Unicameral legislature; members are called senators, except in District of Columbia. ★—Formal provision; number of years not specified. . . .—No formal provision. (a) In some states candidate must be a U.S. citizen to be an elector, and must be an elector to run. (b) In some states candidate must be a state resident to be an elector, and must be an elector to run. (c) State citizenship requirement. (d) Must be a qualified voter of the district; number of years not specified. (e) Following redistricting, a candidate may be elected from any district that contains a part of the district in

Minimum age

State or other jurisdiction

State resident (years) (b)

U.S. citizen (years) (a)

House/Assembly

THE LEGISLATORS: QUALIFICATIONS FOR ELECTION — Continued

21

18 30 (j) 25 25 30

21 18 25 18 25

21 30 26 25 18

Minimum age

... ★ (i) ★ ... ★

★ ★ 5 ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

U.S. citizen (years) (a)

...

1 5 5 5 2

1 ★ 5 (c) 1 ★(c)

★ 3 5 3 (c) 2

State resident (years) (b)

Senate

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ 1 ... (d) 1 (k) 3

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

Qualified voter (years)

★ (d) 1 (d) 1

★ 1 1 6 mo. 1

District resident (years)

which (s)he resided at the time of redistricting, and reelected if a resident of the new district he represents for 18 months prior to reelection. (f) If the district was established for less than six months, residency is length of establishment of district. (g) Shall be a resident of the county if it contains one or more districts or of the district if it contains all or parts of more than one county. (h) After redistricting, must have been a resident of the county in which the district is contained for one year immediately preceding election. (i) Or U.S. national. (j) Must be registered matai. (k) The district legislator must live in the municipality he/she represents. (l) 30 days prior to close of filing for declaration of candidacy.

U ... U ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

Qualified voter (years)

STATE LEGISLATURES

The Council of State Governments

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(a) ES ES (a) (a)

ES (bb) (a) (a) EC/ES (a)

ES (a) ES (a) ES

ES ES ES ES ES

EC (a) ES (a) (a)

ES (a) (a) ES ES

(a) (a) (a) (a) ES (p)

(a) ES (a) ES (a)

Alabama ............................. Alaska ................................. Arizona ............................... Arkansas ............................ California ...........................

Colorado ............................ Connecticut (b) ................. Delaware ............................ Florida ................................ Georgia ...............................

Hawaii ................................ Idaho ................................... Illinois ................................. Indiana ............................... Iowa ....................................

Kansas ................................ Kentucky ............................ Louisiana ........................... Maine .................................. Maryland ...........................

Massachusetts ................... Michigan (aa) .................... Minnesota .......................... Mississippi ......................... Missouri .............................

Montana ............................. Nebraska (U) ..................... Nevada ................................ New Hampshire ................. New Jersey (h) ...................

New Mexico ....................... New York (v) ...................... North Carolina .................. North Dakota .................... Ohio (l) ...............................

Oklahoma .......................... Oregon ................................ Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island (k) ............... South Carolina ..................

See footnotes at end of table.

President

State or other jurisdiction

President pro tem

ES ES ES ES ES

ES ES (i) ES ES ES

ES ES (g) ES AP ES

... ES ES ES ES

ES (f) ES ES AP ES

ES (f) ES ... ES ES

ES (bb) ES EC/ES AP ES

ES ... AP ES ES

EC EC EC EC EC

EC (u) (i) EC EC ...

... ... ... AP EC

AP EC EC ... ...

EC ... ... EC AP (n)

EC EC AP (c) EC EC

EC AP EC AP EC

AT EC EC EC ...

Majority leader

136 EC AL/3 EC AL/6 (o) ...

... AT/2 ... EC ...

... ... ... ... EC/3

AP EC EC ... ...

EC (d) ... ... EC AP (n)

... EC AP/6 AL EC

EC AP ... AL ...

... ... ... ... ...

Assistant majority leader

Table 3.6 SENATE LEADERSHIP POSITIONS: METHODS OF SELECTION Majority floor leader

EC ... EC ... ...

EC (u) ... ... ... ...

ES ... EC ... ...

... EC ... ... EC

... EC ... EC (n)

EC ... ... EC ...

... AP ... AP or AL ...

... ... ... ... EC

Assistant majority floor leader

EC ... EC ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... EC ... ...

... EC ... ... EC

... ... ... EC (n)

... ... ... AL ...

... AP ... AP or AL ...

... ... ... ... ...

Majority whip

EC EC/1 EC AP ...

EC AT EC ... ES

ES ... EC ... EC

... EC AL ... EC

EC (e) EC ... EC AP (bb)

... ... ... AL ...

... AP EC AP or AL EC

... EC EC EC EC

Majority caucus chair

EC (p) EC ... ...

EC AT (j) EC EC (p)

... ... ... ... EC

(p) EC ... ... EC

(e) EC ... EC ...

EC (cc) EC AP EC ...

EC AP ... AP or AL EC

... EC ... ... EC

Minority leader

EC EC (p) EC EC EC

EC (u) EC EC EC ES (p)

... ... ... EC EC

EC EC EC ... EC

EC ... ... EC EC (bb)

EC EC EC EC EC

EC EC EC EC EC

EC EC EC EC EC

Assistant minority leader

EC EC/2 EC AP/2 (o) ...

... AL/3 ... EC ES

... ... ... AL EC/3

... EC EC ... ...

EC ... ... EC ...

... EC AL/5 AL EC

EC AL ... AL ...

... ... EC ... ...

Minority floor leader

EC ... EC ... ...

EC (u) ... ... EC ...

ES ... EC ... ...

... EC ... ... ...

... EC ... EC (bb)

EC ... ... AL ...

... AL EC AL ...

... ... ... ... EC

Assistant minority floor leader

EC ... EC AP ...

... ... ... EC ...

... ... EC ... ...

... EC ... ... ...

... ... ... EC ...

... ... ... AL ...

... AL ... AL ...

... ... ... ... ...

Minority whip

EC EC/1 EC AP ...

EC AL EC ... ES

ES ... EC AL EC

... EC EC ... ...

EC EC ... EC EC

... ... ... AL ...

... AL EC AL EC

... EC EC EC EC

Minority caucus chair

EC (p) EC ... ...

EC AL (j) EC EC (p)

... ... ... ... EC

(p) EC ... ... EC

EC EC ... EC ...

... EC AL EC ...

EC AL ... AL EC

... EC ... ... EC

STATE LEGISLATURES


(a) ES (a) ES (a)

(a) (a) ES ES ES

(w) ES ES (g) ES (ee) ES (p)

ES

South Dakota ..................... Tennessee ........................... Texas ................................... Utah (q) .............................. Vermont .............................

Virginia .............................. Washington (s) .................. West Virginia ..................... Wisconsin ........................... Wyoming ............................

Dist. of Columbia (U) ....... American Samoa ............... Guam (U) ........................... No. Mariana Islands ......... Puerto Rico ........................

U.S. Virgin Islands (U) .....

President pro tem

ES (f)

(x) ES ES (f) ... AS

ES ES AP ES ES (f)

ES AP (m) ES ... ES

Majority leader

ES

... ... EC (ee) AS

EC EC AP EC ...

EC EC (m) ... EC EC

...

... ... EC ... ...

... ... ... EC ...

EC ... ... ... EC

Assistant majority leader

(n)

... ... ... ES (y) EC (z)

EC EC ... EC EC

... ... ... ... EC (r)

Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003 and October 2004. Note: In some states, the leadership positions in the Senate are not empowered by the law or by the rules of the chamber, but rather by the party members themselves. Entry following slash indicates number of individuals holding specified position. Key: ES—Elected or confirmed by all members of the Senate. EC—Elected by party caucus. AP—Appointed by president. AT—Appointed by president pro tempore. AL—Appointed by party leader. (U)—Unicameral legislative body. . . .—Position does not exist or is not selected on a regular basis. (a) Lieutenant governor is president of the Senate by virtue of the office. (b) Position titles are as follows: chief deputy president pro tem, two deputy presidents pro tem, a chief assistant president pro tem, three assistant presidents pro tem, three deputy majority leaders (AP); a minority leader pro tem, two chief deputy minority leaders, a deputy minority leader-at-large, and three deputy minority leaders (AL). (c) The president can, at his or her discretion, serve as majority leader and usually does. (d) Assistant majority leader also serves as majority party caucus chairperson. (e) Official title is assistant majority leader/whip. (f) Official title is vice president. In Guam, vice speaker. (g) Official title is speaker. In Tennessee, official also has the statutory title of lieutenant governor. (h) Additional positions include deputy majority leader (EC), two deputy assistant minority leaders (EC), and minority leader pro tem (EC). (i) President pro tempore is also majority leader. (j) Majority caucus chair: official title is majority conference chair. Minority caucus chair: official title is minority conference chair. (k) Additional positions include deputy president pro tempore. (l) Additional positions include assistant president pro tempore (ES) and assistant minority whip (ES). (m) President pro tem: official title is speaker pro tem. Official titles of majority party leaders: Democratic; official titles of minority party leaders: Republican.

President

State or other jurisdiction

Majority floor leader

SENATE LEADERSHIP POSITIONS: METHODS OF SELECTION — Continued Assistant majority floor leader

Majority whip

...

... ... EC ... ...

... EC AP ... EC

EC ... ... EC EC (r)

Majority caucus chair

(n)

... ... ... ... (dd)

EC EC ... EC EC

... EC (m) ... ... EC (r)

Minority leader

...

... ... EC EC EC (p)

EC EC (t) EC EC ...

EC EC (m) ... EC EC

Assistant minority leader

...

... ... EC ... ...

... EC (t) ... EC ...

EC ... ... ... EC

Minority floor leader

...

... ... ... ... EC (z)

... EC (t) ... EC EC

... ... ... ... EC (r)

Assistant minority floor leader

...

... ... ... ... ...

... EC (t) ... EC ...

... ... ... ... EC (r)

Minority whip

...

... ... EC ... ...

... EC (t) AL ... EC

EC ... ... EC EC (r)

...

... ... ... ... (p)

... EC (t) ... EC EC

... EC (m) ... ... EC (r)

Minority caucus chair

(n) Majority leader also serves as majority floor leader; deputy majority leader is official title and serves as assistant majority floor leader. there is also an assistant deputy majority leader; there is also a deputy majority whip and assistant deputy majority whips; minority leader also serves as minority floor leader. (o) Assistant majority leader: official title is deputy majority leader. Assistant minority leader: official title is deputy minority leader. (p) President and minority floor leader are also caucus chairs. In Ohio and Puerto Rico, president and minority leader. In Oregon, majority leader and minority leader. (q) Additional positions include assistant majority whip (EC) assistant majority whip (EC), minority whip (EC), assistant minority whip (EC) and minority caucus leader (EC). (r) Majority leader serves as majority floor leader and majority caucus chair. Assistant majority leader serves as assistant majority floor leader and majority whip. Minority leader serves as minority floor leader and minority caucus chair. Assistant minority leader serves as assistant minority floor leader and minority whip. (s) Additional positions include vice president pro tem (ES), majority assistant whip (EC), and Republican assistant whip (EC). (t) Customary title of minority party leaders is the party designation (Republican). (u) Majority leader also serves as majority floor leader. Minority leader also serves as minority floor leader. (v) Additional positions include vice president pro tem (AT), deputy majority leader for legislative operations (AT), majority program development chair (AT), deputy minority leader (AL), senior assistant majority leader (AT), majority conference vice chair (AT), minority conference vice chair (AL), majority conference secretary (AT), deputy majority whip (AT), majority steering committee chair (AT), minority conference secretary (AL), assistant majority whip (AT), and assistant minority whip (AL). (w) Chair of the Council, which is an elected position. (x) Appointed by the chair; official title is chair pro tem. (y) Official title is floor leader. (z) Office title is alternate floor leader. (aa) Additional positions include assistant president, associate president pro tempore, assistant majority caucus chair, assistant minority caucus chair. (bb) Selected informally by majority caucus shortly after November election. (cc) Official title is majority caucus leader. (dd) Official title is caucus chairman. (ee) Speaker also serves as majority leader.

...

... ... ... ... ...

... EC ... EC ...

EC ... ... ... EC (r)

STATE LEGISLATURES

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See footnotes at end of table.

EH EH EH AS EH

... AS EH ... EH AS EC (q) EC EC EC

EC AS EC EC ... AS AL/7 EC EC/11 (f) ...

... AS ... EC ...

AS ... EC ... ...

EC (h) ... ... ... EH

AS ... EC ... ...

... ... ... ... EH

... EC ... ... EC

AS EC EC AL ...

EC AS EC ... EH

... EC ... ... EC

EC EC ... (j) AS

EC ... ... AL ...

AS (q) EC ... ...

EC AS (o) EC EC (g)

(h) EC ... ... EC

EC EC ... ... (g)

... EC AS (c) AL ...

EC AS (b) ... AS EC

EC EC (q) EC EC EC

EC EC EC EC EH (g)

EC (h) EC EC ... ...

EC ... ... EC (j) EC

EC EC EC EC EC

EC EC EC EC EC

EC AL/5 EC AL/3 (r) ...

... AL/2 ... EC ...

AL EC AL ... ...

EC ... ... EC (j) ...

EC EC AL/6 AL EC

EC AL (b) ... EC ...

EC ... EC ... ...

EC (h) ... ... EC ...

... EC ... ... EC

... EC ... (j) ...

EC ... AL/2 (c) EC ...

... AL (b) ... AL ...

EC ... EC ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... EC ... ... EC

... ... ... (j) ...

EC ... ... AL ...

... AL (b) ... AL ...

EC EC/3 EC AL ...

EC AL EC ... EH

... EC ... ... EC

EC EC ... (j) EC

EC ... ... AL ...

EC AL (b) EC AL EC

EC (q) EC ... ...

EC AL (o) EC EC (g)

(h) EC ... ... EC

EC EC ... ... (g)

... EC AL (c) AL ...

EC AL (b) ... AL EC

EH EH EH EH EH

... EC ... ... EC

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

... EC EC EC EC

EH EH EH EH EH (g)

... EC ... ... EC

... ... ... (j) AS

... ... ... AL ...

EC AS (b) EC AS EC

... ... ... ... ...

New Mexico ........................ New York (n) ...................... North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio (p) ...............................

AS ... EC ... ...

... EC ... (j) (e)

EC ... AS/2 (c) AL ...

... AS (b) ... AS ...

... ... ... ... EC

EH EH ... ... EH ... EH ... ... ... EH ... EH ... ....................................................................................................................................... (i) ............................................................................................................................................................ EH EH ... ... EC EC EC ... ... ... EC EC EC ... EH AS (a) AS AS (k) ... ... AS (k) ... AS (k) AL (k) ... ... ... ... EH EH EC EC/3 ... ... EC EC (m) EC EC/4 ... ... EC EC (m)

AS ... EC ... ...

EC ... ... EC (j) AS (e)

... EC AS/6 AL EC

... ... ... AS ...

... ... EC ... ...

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey (l) .....................

... EH AS EH EH

EC ... ... EC (j) AS (e)

EC EC AS EC EC

EC EC/4 (b) ... AS ...

EC EC EC EC EC

EC EH EH EH EH

EH EH EH AS (d) EH

EH (a) ... ... AL EH

EC EC EC AS EC

... EC ... ... EC

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Speaker

EH EH EH EH EH

Majority whip ... EC EC EC AS

Majority caucus chair

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Assistant majority floor leader ... ... ... ... ...

Minority leader

EH EH EH EH EH

Majority floor leader ... ... ... ... AS

Assistant minority leader

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

AS AS/4(b) ... EH EH

... ... ... ... AS

Minority floor leader

EH (x) EH EC/EH EH EH

EC EC EC EC AS

Assistant minority floor leader

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Speaker pro tem EH ... AS AS AS

Minority whip

EH EH EH EH EH

Minority caucus chair

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State or other jurisdiction

Majority leader

138 Assistant majority leader

Table 3.7 HOUSE LEADERSHIP POSITIONS: METHODS OF SELECTION

STATE LEGISLATURES


Speaker

... ...

... ... AS EC ... ...

(h) ... ... EC EC ... ...

EC EC AS ... EC ...

EC EC (t) AS EC EC ...

EC (h) EC EC EC ...

EC EC ... EC EC

...

... ... ... EC ...

EC EC ... EC (s) EC

...

(h) EC ... EC EC

... EC ... ... (j)

...

EC ... ... EC ...

... ... ... ... (j)

EC EC ... EC (j)

...

... (EC ... ... EC

...

EC EC ... EC EC

... EC ... EC (s) (j)

(k) Official titles: assistant majority leader is deputy majority leader, majority whip is deputy majority whip, minority leader is Democratic leader and assistant minority leader is deputy minority leader. (l) Additional positions include four deputy speakers (EC), three assistant majority whips (EC), majority budget officer (EC), minority leader pro tem (EC), and three deputy minority leaders (EC). (m) Official titles: majority caucus chair is majority conference leader and minority caucus chair is conference chair. (n) Additional positions: deputy speaker (AS), assistant speaker (AS), assistant speaker pro tem (AS), minority leader pro tem (AL), assistant minority leader pro tem (AL), deputy majority leader (AS), deputy minority leader (AL), deputy majority whip (AS), deputy minority whip (AL), assistant majority whip (AS), assistant minority whip (AL), majority conference vice-chair (AS), minority conference vice-chair (AL), majority conference secretary (AS), minority conference secretary (AL), majority steering committee chair (AS), majority steering committee vice-chair (AS), minority steering committee chair (AL), minority steering committee vice-chair (AL), majority program committee chair (AS). and minority program committee chair (AL). (o) Official titles: majority caucus chair is majority conference chair; minority caucus chair is minority conference chair. (p) Additional positions include assistant majority whip (EH) and assistant minority whip (EH). (q) Majority leader also serves as majority caucus chair; minority leader also serves as minority caucus chair. (r) Official title is deputy minority leader. (s) Assistant majority floor leader known as assistant majority whip, assistant minority floor leader known as assistant minority whip, minority caucus chair known as minority caucus manager. (t) Additional position is caucus vice chair (EC). (u) Speaker also serves as majority leader. (v) Official title is floor leader. (w) Official title is alternate floor leader. (x) Selected informally by majority caucus shortly after November election.

... EC/2 ... EC ...

Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003 and October 2004. Note: In some states, the leadership positions in the house are not empowered by the law or by the rules of the chamber, but rather by the party members themselves. Entry following slash indicates number of individuals holding specified position. Key: EH—Elected or confirmed by all members of the house. EC—Elected by party caucus. AS—Appointed by speaker. AL—Appointed by party leader. . . .—Position does not exist or is not selected on a regular basis. (a) Official title is deputy speaker. In Hawaii, American Samoa and Puerto Rico, vice speaker. (b) Official titles: speaker pro tem - deputy speaker; assistant majority leader - deputy majority leader; (c) Official titles: majority floor leader is deputy majority leader, majority caucus chair is majority conference chair, minority floor leader is deputy minority leader, and minority caucus chair is minority conference chair. (d) Each occurance. (e) Majority leader also serves as majority floor leader. Official title of assistant majority leader is deputy majority leader. (f) Official title is deputy majority leader. (g) Speaker and minority leader are also caucus chair. (h) Majority leader also serves as majority floor leader; minority leader also serves as minority floor leader. (i) Unicameral legislature; see entries in Table 3.6, Senate Leadership Positions—Methods of Selection. (j) Majority leader also serves as majority floor leader; assistant majority leader also serves as assistant majority floor leader and majority whip; minority leader also serves as minority floor leader; assistant minority leader also serves as assistant minority floor leader and minority whip.

EH (a)

EC (h) EC AS EC ...

... EC ... ... (j)

....................................................................................................................................... (i) ............................................................................................................................................................ EH (u) ... (u) ... EH (v) ... ... ... EC ... ... ... ... ... EH (g) EH (a) EC ... EC (w) ... ... ... EC (g) ... EC (w) ... ... (g) ....................................................................................................................................... (i) ............................................................................................................................................................

Majority whip EC EC ... EC (j)

Majority caucus chair

Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands ........... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

... EH AS EH EH

... EC ... EC (s) (j)

Minority leader

(i) EH

Majority floor leader ... EC ... ... (j)

Assistant minority leader

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................

Assistant majority leader EC EC ... ... EC

Minority floor leader

EH EH EH EH EH

Majority leader EC EC ... EC EC

Assistant minority floor leader

Virginia ............................... Washington (o) ................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Speaker pro tem EH EH AS AS ...

Minority whip

EH EH EH EH EH

Minority caucus chair

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

State or other jurisdiction

Assistant majority floor leader

HOUSE LEADERSHIP POSITIONS — METHODS OF SELECTION — Continued

STATE LEGISLATURES

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STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.8 METHOD OF SETTING LEGISLATIVE COMPENSATION State or other jurisdiction

Constitution

Statute

Alabama ............................. Alaska ................................. Arizona ............................... Arkansas ............................ California ...........................

★ ... ... ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ (a) ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

Colorado ............................ Connecticut ........................ Delaware ............................ Florida ................................

... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ★

... ★ (b) ★ (c) ...

Georgia ...............................

...

...

... ... ... Statute provides members same percentage increase as state employees. ...

Hawaii ................................ Idaho ................................... Illinois .................................

... ... ...

... ... ★

★ (d) ★ ★

Indiana ............................... Iowa ....................................

... ...

★ ★

... ★

... ... Salaries are tied to employment cost index, wages and salaries for state and local government workers. ... ...

Kansas ................................ Kentucky ............................ Louisiana ........................... Maine .................................. Maryland ...........................

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ (f) ...

... ★ (e) ... ★ ★ (g)

... ... ... ... ...

Massachusetts ................... Michigan ............................ Minnesota .......................... Mississippi ......................... Missouri .............................

... ... ... ... ★

★ (h) ... ★ ★ ★ (k)

... ★ (i) ★ (j) ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Montana ............................. Nebraska ............................ Nevada ................................ New Hampshire ................. New Jersey .........................

... ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

Tied to executive branch pay matrix. ... ... ... ...

New Mexico ....................... New York ............................ North Carolina .................. North Dakota .................... Ohio ....................................

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

Oklahoma .......................... Oregon ................................ Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... South Carolina ..................

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ (l) ... ★

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

South Dakota ..................... Tennessee ........................... Texas ................................... Utah .................................... Vermont .............................

★ ★ ★ (m) ... ...

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

Virginia .............................. Washington ........................ West Virginia ..................... Wisconsin ...........................

★ ★ ... ...

★ (n) ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ (o) ...

Wyoming ............................

...

...

... ... ... The Commission plan is approved by Joint Committee on Employment Relations and the governor. It is tied to state employer compensation. ...

Dist. of Columbia ..............

...

...

...

See footnotes at end of table.

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Compensation commission

Legislators’ salaries tied or related to state employees’ salaries


STATE LEGISLATURES

METHOD OF SETTING LEGISLATIVE COMPENSATION — Continued Source: National Conference of State Legislatures, 2003. Key: ★— Method used to set compensation. . . . — Method not used to set compensation. (a) Arizona commission recommendations are put on ballot for a vote of the people. (b) The Connecticut General Assembly takes independent action pursuant to recommendations of a Compensation Committee. (c) Are implemented automatically if not rejected by resolution. (d) Commission recommendations take effect unless rejected by concurrent resolution or the Governor. Any change in salary that becomes effective does not apply to the legislature to which the recommendation was submitted. (e) The Kentucky committee has not met since 1995. The most recent pay raise was initiated and passed by the General Assembly. (f) Presented to the Legislature in the form of legislation, the legislature must enact and the Governor must sign into law. (g) Maryland commission meets before each four-year term of office and presents recommendations to General Assembly for its action. Recommendations may be reduced or rejected, not increased. (h) In 1998 , the voters passed a legislative referendum starting with the

2001 session, members will receive an automatic increase or decrease according to the median household income for the commonwealth for the preceding 2 year period. (i) If resolution is offered, it is put to legislative vote; if legislature does not vote recommendations down, the new salaries take effect January 1 of the new year. (j) By May 1 in odd numbered years the Council submits salary recommendations to the presiding officers. (k) Recommendations are adjusted by legislature or governor if necessary. (l) Each chamber receives a cost of living increase that is tied to the Consumer Price Index. (m) In 1991 a constitutional amendment was approved by voters to allow the Ethics Commission to recommend the salaries of members. Any recommendations must be approved by voters to be effective. This provision has yet to be used. (n) In 1998 the Joint Rules Committee created a Legislative Compensation Commission. It was composed of two former governors and citizens that made recommendations regarding salary, per diem and office expenses. (o) Submits, by resolution and must be concurred by at least four members of the commission. The Legislature must enact the resolution into law and may reduce, but shall not increase, any item established in such resolution.

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141


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.9 LEGISLATIVE COMPENSATION: REGULAR SESSIONS Salaries Regular sessions State or other jurisdiction

Per diem salary (a)

Limit on days

Annual salary

Per diem living expenses

Alabama .........................

$10 C

...

...

$2,280/m plus $50/d for three days each week that the legislature actually meets during any session (U).

Alaska .............................

...

...

$24,012

$204/day (U) tied to federal rate. Legislators who reside in the capitol area receive 75% of federal rate.

Arizona ...........................

...

...

$24,000

$35/d for the 1st 120 days of regular session and for special session and $10/d thereafter; members residing outside Maricopa County receive an additional $25/d for the 1st 120 days of regular session and for special session and an additional $10/d thereafter (V). Set by statute.

Arkansas* ......................

...

...

$13,751

$111/d (V) plus mileage tied to federal rate.

California .......................

...

...

$99,000

$140/d (V) by roll call. Maximum allowable per diem is paid regardless of actual expenses.

Colorado ........................

...

...

$30,000

$45/d for members living in the Denver metro area. $99/d for members living outside Denver (V). Per diem is determined by the legislature.

Connecticut .................... Delaware ........................ Florida ............................

... ... ...

... ... ...

$28,000 $36,500 $29,916

No per diem is paid. No per diem is paid. $103/d (V) tied to the federal rate. Earned based on the number of days in session. Travel vouchers are filed to substantiate.

Georgia ...........................

...

...

$16,200

$128/d (U) set by the legislature.

Hawaii ............................

...

...

$32,000

$80 for members living outside Oahu; $10/d for members living on Oahu (V) set by the legislature.

Idaho ...............................

...

...

$15,646

$99/d for members establishing second residence in Boise; $38/day if no second residence is established and up to $25/d travel (U) set by Compensation Commission.

Illinois .............................

...

...

$55,788

$85 (U) tied to federal rate.

Indiana ...........................

...

...

$11,600

$132 (U) tied to federal rate.

Iowa ................................

...

...

$21,380.54

$86/d (U). $65/d for Polk County legislators (U) set by the legislature. State mileage rates apply.

Kansas ............................

$78.75 C

...

...

$86/d (U) tied to federal rate.

Kentucky ........................

$166.34 C

...

...

$94.60/d (U) tied to federal rate. (110% federal per diem rate).

Louisiana .......................

...

...

$16,800

$113/d (U) tied to federal rate. Additional $6,000/yr (U) expense allowance.

Maine ..............................

...

...

$11,384–1st $8,302–2nd

$38/d housing or reimbursement for mileage in lieu of housing at the rate of .32/mile up to $38/d. $32/d meals (V) set by the legislature.

Maryland .......................

...

...

$31,509

Lodging $96/d; meals $32/d (V) tied to federal rate and compensation commission.

Massachusetts ...............

...

...

$53,379.93

From $10/d-$100/d, depending on distance from State House (V) set by the legislature.

Michigan ........................

...

...

$79,650

$12,000 yearly expense allowance for session and interim (V) set by compensation commission.

Minnesota ......................

...

...

$31,140

Senators receive $66/d and Representatives receive $56/L (U) set by the legislature.

Mississippi .....................

...

...

$10,000

$86/d (U) tied to federal rate.

Missouri .........................

...

...

$31,351

$76/d tied to federal rate. Verification of per diem is by roll call. Mileage is 34.5 cents per mile.

Montana .........................

$76.80 L

...

...

$90.31/d (U).

Nebraska ........................

...

...

$12,000

$86/d outside 50-mile radius from Capitol; $31/d if member resides within 50 miles of Capitol (V) tied to federal rate.

Nevada ............................

$130

60

...

Federal rate for Capitol area (V). Legislators who live more than 50 miles from the capitol, if requiring lodging, will be paid Hud single room rate for Carson City area for each month of session.

New Hampshire .............

...

2 yr. term

New Jersey .....................

...

...

See footnotes at end of table.

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$200

No per diem is paid.

$49,000

No per diem is paid.


STATE LEGISLATURES

LEGISLATIVE COMPENSATION: REGULAR SESSIONS — Continued Salaries Regular sessions State or other jurisdiction

Per diem salary (a)

Limit on days

Annual salary

Per diem living expenses

New Mexico ...................

...

...

...

$146/d (V) tied to federal rate and the constitution.

New York ........................

...

...

$79,500

Varies (V) tied to federal rate.

North Carolina ..............

...

...

$13,951

$104/d (U) set by statute. $559/m expense allowance.

North Dakota ................

$125 C

...

...

Lodging reimbursement up to $650/m (V). $250/m additional compensation by statute.

Ohio ................................

...

$54,942

No per diem is paid.

Oklahoma ......................

...

...

$38,400

$110/d (U) tied to federal rate.

Oregon* ..........................

...

...

$15,396

$86/d (U) tied to federal rate.

Pennsylvania .................

...

...

$66,203.55

$125/d (V) tied to federal rate. Can receive actual expenses or per diem.

Rhode Island .................

...

...

$12,285.53

No per diem is paid.

South Carolina ..............

...

...

$10,400

$95/d for meals and housing, for each statewide session day and cmte. meeting (V) tied to federal rate.

South Dakota .................

...

2 yr. term

$12,000

$110/L (U) set by the legislature.

Tennessee .......................

...

...

$16,500

$129/L (U).

Texas* .............................

...

...

$7,200

$125/d (U) set by Ethics Commission.

Utah ................................

$120 C

...

...

$80/d (U) lodging allotment for each calendar day, tied to federal rate. $39/d (U) meals.

Vermont .........................

...

...

$589/week during session

$50/d for lodging and $37/d for meals for non-commuters; commuters receive $32/d for meals (U) set by legislature.

Virginia ..........................

...

...

Senate$18,000 House$17,640

$115 (U) tied to federal rate.

Washington ....................

...

...

$34,227

$82/d (U) tied to federal rate (85% Olympia area).

West Virginia .................

...

...

$15,000

$115/d (U) during session set by compensation commission. $150 per diem salary for special sessions.

Wisconsin .......................

...

...

$45,569

$88/d maximum (U) set by compensation commission (90% of federal rate).

Wyoming ........................

$125 L

...

...

$80/d (V) set by the legislature, includes travel days for those outside of Cheyenne.

Dist. of Columbia ..........

...

...

$92,500

No per diem is paid.

Guam ..............................

...

...

N.R.

N.R.

Puerto Rico ....................

...

...

$60,000

$122/d within 50 kilometers of capitol; $132 if outside 50 kilometers (U).

U.S. Virgin Islands ........

...

...

$65,000

$30/d (U) set by the legislature.

Source: National Conference of State Legislatures, 2004. *—Biennial session. In Arkansas, Oregon and Texas, legislators receive an annual salary. Key: C—Calendar day L—Legislative day (U)—Unvouchered (V)—Vouchered d—day w—week m—month y—year . . . —Not applicable N.R.—Not reported (a) Legislators paid on a per diem basis receive the same rate during a special session.

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143


144

The Book of the States 2005

Members are reimbursed for actual expenses (V).

Idaho ...................................

$1,700/y for unvouchered constituent expense. No staffing allowance.

House $4,500/m for Jan.-April staffing. Senate varies between $350-500/d for staffing allowance.

$7,000/y reimbursable expense account. If the member requests and provides receipts, the member is reimbursed for personal services, office equipment, rent, supplies, transportation, telecommunications, etc.

$1,650/m for office expenses.

$6,728/y for office expenses.

Senators receive $5,500/y and Representatives receive $4,500/y (U) expense allowance.

$3,355/y

Senators are allowed staff according to the size of their districts. Assemblymen receive $260,000/y to cover non-specified salary expenses, travel costs, publications, printing, postage, etc.

Actual attendance reimbursed at: $55 per diem; actual meals and mileage/housing expense. Chair of committee or presiding officer has to review and approve.

$96/d lodging; $30/d meals related to official business (V) tied to federal rate and compensation commission.

Maine ..................................

Maryland ...........................

$1,503.19 for district expenses.

$163.56 for committee meetings (U). Legislators are reimbursed for actual expenses.

$116/d (U) tied to federal rate.

Kentucky ............................

Louisiana ...........................

$5,400/y which is taxable income to the legislators. Staffing allowances vary for leadership who have their own budget Legislators provided with secretaries during the session only..

During interim committee meetings, members receive $85/d tied to federal rate, plus round trip tolls and mileage reimbursement at 33¢. All legislators receive $270 (U) for 20 pay periods ($5,400) considered taxable income.

Kansas ................................

Members, $18,265/y for normal expenses of an office with limits on postage, telephone and publications. Members must document expenses. Legislators must use $5,800 for clerical services. Senators receive one administrative assistant & session secretary. Delegates receive one benefited employee and a session secretary.

None.

$500/m. Representatives receive an additional $1,500 supplemental allowance for vouchered office expenses,rent, travel mileage in district. Senators and Representatives staff allowance $2,000/m starting salary up to $3,000 with annual increases paid directly to staff person.

$200/m to cover district constituency postage, travel, telephone and other expenses. No staffing allowance.

$112/d (V) tied to federal rate.

$86/d (U) set by the legislature. In addition, legislators may request reimbursement for meals, hotel/motel and air fare. State mileage rates apply.

Indiana ...............................

Iowa ....................................

$25/d, 7 days a week during interim only. No staffing allowance.

$10/d for official business on island of legal residence; $80/d for business on another island (V) set by the legislature.

Hawaii ................................

None. Legislators are entitled to receive a maximum reimbursement of $9,600/y for legislative expenses.

Senators receive $67,000/y and Representatives $57,000/y for office expenses, including district offices and staffing.

$128/d (V) set by the Legislature. A committee roster is submitted with the members who attended the meeting. Those that did not attend do not get paid.

Georgia ...............................

Other direct payments or services to legislators (2002)

Senators received $10,000/y and Representatives receive $8,000/y for postage, stationery and other legislative expenses. Staffing allowance determined by rules and presiding officers, depending on time of year.

None.

Illinois .................................

None.

$50/d per diem or actual hotel plus $3 breakfast; $6 lunch; $12 dinner for authorized travel during committee weeks (V) set by Florida statutes.

Delaware ............................

Florida ................................

$99/d per diem plus actual expenses (V).

None.

Colorado ............................

$121/d (V) tied to federal rate.

California ...........................

Connecticut ........................

$35/d with prior approval of presiding officer (V) set by statute.

$95/d with mileage (V) tied to federal rate.

Arizona ...............................

$65/d (V)

Alaska .................................

Arkansas ............................

$2,280/m (U); $50/d for committee meetings and $75/d attendance other legislative business. Not restricted to meals and lodging.

Per diem compensation and living expenses for committee or official business during interim (2002)

Alabama .............................

State or other jurisdiction

Table 3.10 LEGISLATIVE COMPENSATION: INTERIM PAYMENTS AND OTHER DIRECT PAYMENTS

STATE LEGISLATURES


Member attending official meetings is eligible for $95/d subsistence and $35/d per diem (V) tied to the federal rate.

South Carolina ..................

See footnotes at end of table.

$124 (V) tied to federal rate. Can receive actual expenses or per diem.

None.

Pennsylvania .....................

$85/d committee and task force meetings (U) tied to federal rate.

Oregon ................................

Rhode Island .....................

None.

$25/d (U) set by the legislature.

Ohio ....................................

During interim committee meetings, members receive $100/d, $20/d meals (U); $45 plus tax/d lodging (V) plus round trip mileage reimbursement at 31¢. All members receive a $250/m allowance for expenses during their term in office.

North Dakota ....................

Oklahoma ..........................

$104/d (V) set by statute.

North Carolina ..................

None.

$145/d (V) tied to federal rate.

Varies (V) tied to federal rate.

New Mexico .......................

New York ............................

$750 for supplies, equipment and furnishings supplied through a district office program. $100,000/y for district office personnel.

None.

New Jersey .........................

Senate $3,400/y for postage, stationery and telephone. House $1,800/y for telephone and $1,100/y for postage.Legislators also receive $1,000/m for in district expenses that is treated as income.

None.

Staffing is determined by the Senate Floor Leader.

$2,635/session; interim allowance is $400-550/m depending on geographic size of district. Staffing allowance of $3,908/m during session; $1,846/m during interim.

$350/y for unvouchered office supplies plus seven rolls of stamps.

None.

None.

Non-leaders receive $6,708/y for any legislative expenses not otherwise provided. Full-time secretarial assistance is provided during session.

Staff allowance set by majority leader for majority members and by minority leader for minority members. Staff allowance covers both district and capitol; geographic location; seniority and leadership responsibilities will cause variations.

None.

None.

None.

New Hampshire .................

No allowance; however, each member is provided with two full-time capitol staff year-round.

None. Actual expense reimbursed with expense vouchers provided.

Statutory amount (V) maximum allowable per diem is paid regardless of actual expenses.

None.

$1,000/m to cover all reasonable and necessary business expenses.

None.

None.

Nebraska ............................

In state rate for meals, receipt not required . In state rate for lodging and mileage receipt required (V). Claim form required.

Montana .............................

Other direct payments or services to legislators (2002) $7,200/y for office expenses. $30,900/y for printing, mailings, travel, furniture and district offices. Senate Majority party receives $233,918; Senate Minority party receives $136,536 for staffing.

Nevada ................................

$85/d for committee meetings (U) tied to federal rate. $1,500 allowance (U).

None.

Mississippi .........................

Senators receive $66/d and Representatives receive $56/d per approval of committee chair or leadership (U) set by the legislature.

Minnesota ..........................

Missouri .............................

None. None.

Per diem compensation and living expenses for committee or official business during interim (2002)

Massachusetts ................... Michigan ............................

State or other jurisdiction

LEGISLATIVE COMPENSATION: INTERIM PAYMENTS AND OTHER DIRECT PAYMENTS—Continued

STATE LEGISLATURES

The Council of State Governments

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$93/d within 35 miles of the capitol; $103/d beyond the 35 miles limit (U) tied to CPI.

None.

Puerto Rico ........................

U.S. Virgin Islands ............

Source: National Conference of State Legislatures, March 2002. Notes: ( i) For more information on legislative compensation, see the Chapter 3 table entitled “Legislative Compensation: Regular Sessions.” (ii) Although the official definition of “per diem” is daily expense allowance, it is also used in some states to refer to an interim salary that is taxed and reported as separate income from the annual salary. Key: (U) —Unvouchered. (V)—Vouchered. d—day. m—month. w—week. y—year. N.R.—not reported.

None.

N.R.

Dist. of Columbia ..............

$80/d (V) set by the legislature. Includes travel for those where meetings are not in “hometown.”

Wyoming ............................

Guam ..................................

$85/d (U) set by compensation commission.

Per diem is paid year round up to $88/d (U) set by compensation commission (90% of federal rate)

West Virginia .....................

$82/d (V) tied to federal rate (85% Olympia area). Maximum allowable per diem is paid regardless of actual expenses.

Washington ........................

Wisconsin ...........................

$200/d additional compensation for committee meeting attendance. No per diem is paid.

Virginia ..............................

None.

$42/d meals (U); up to $75/d for lodging (V).

Actual cost plus mileage (U) set by the legislature.

Utah ....................................

Vermont .............................

Senators receive an allowance that covers day-to-day operations. Staffing allowances vary with staffing requests.

Senate receives $10,833/m for staffing. House members receive $17,000/m for staffing.

None.

None.

Up to $450 per quarter.

Senate receives $66,000/two-year session plus a mailing for the district each year. Covers district mileage, copying and special documents; capitol expenses include printing, postage, subscriptions, phone etc.Senators receive $186,000/two-year session for staffing. Assembly members receive $12,500 plus an allowance for district size-min. $870, max. $2,900 that covers printing and postage. Staff salary paid by state.

None.

$1,350/quarter for legislative expenses, for which the legislator has not been otherwise entitled to reimbursement. No staffing allowance.

Legislators receive $1,250/m; leadership receives $1,750/m office expense allowance. Legislators receive a staffing allowance of $31,844/y; leadership receives $47,765/y.

None.

$525/m for expenses in district and staff intrastate travel (U). Senate: $25,000/m for staff salaries. House $10,750/m for staff salaries, supplies stationery, postage, district office rental, telephone expense, etc.

$114/d (U) tied to federal rate.

Senators receive $124/d for legislative business in Travis County, not to exceed 10 d/m (V). Representatives receive $124/d in Travis County, not to exceed 12 d/m (V). Per diem amount is determined by the Ethics Commission, number of days determined by Senate Caucus and the Committee on House Administration.

Tennessee ...........................

Other direct payments or services to legislators (2002)

Texas ...................................

None.

$110 per diem for each day of a committee meeting (U). Meals and lodging expenses are paid at state rate.

Per diem compensation and living expenses for committee or official business during interim (2002)

South Dakota .....................

State or other jurisdiction

LEGISLATIVE COMPENSATION: INTERIM PAYMENTS AND OTHER DIRECT PAYMENTS—Continued

STATE LEGISLATURES


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.11 ADDITIONAL COMPENSATION FOR SENATE LEADERS State or other jurisdiction

Presiding officer

Majority leader None

Minority leader

Other leaders

Alabama ............................

$2/day plus $1,500/mo

None

None

Alaska ................................

$500

None

None

None

Arizona ..............................

None

None

None

None

Arkansas ...........................

None

None

None

None

California ..........................

Base plus $14,850

Base plus $7,425

Base plus $14,850

Second ranking minority leader; base plus $7,425.

Colorado ...........................

All leaders receive $99/day salary during interim when in attendance at committee or leadership meetings and committee meetings.

Connecticut .......................

$10,689

Delaware ...........................

$16,600

$9,913

$9,913

Maj. and min. whips $6,243

Florida ...............................

$10,800

None

None

None

Georgia ..............................

$6,694.68/mo

$200/mo

$200/mo

President pro tem, $400/mo; admin. flr. ldr., $100/mo; asst. admin. flr. ldr., $100/mo

Hawaii ...............................

$37,000

None

None

None

Idaho ..................................

$3,000

None

None

None

Illinois ................................

$22,641

None

$22,641

Indiana ..............................

$6,500

$5,000

$5,500

Asst. maj. and min. ldr., $16,979; maj. and min. caucus chair, $16,979 Asst. pres. pro tem $2,500; asst. maj. flr. ldr. and maj. caucus chair, $1,000; maj. caucus chair, $5,000; min. asst. flr. ldr. and min. caucus chair, $4,500; maj. and min. whips, $1,500; asst. min. caucus chair, $500

Iowa ...................................

$11,593

$11,593

$11,593

Pres. Pro Tem $1,243

Kansas ...............................

$12,103.78/yr

$10,919.74/yr

$10,919.74/yr

Asst. maj., min. ldrs., vice pres., $6,177.86/yr

Kentucky ...........................

$38.90/day

$31.43/day

$31.43/day

Maj., min. caucus chairs and whips, $24.09/day

Louisiana ..........................

$32,000

None

None

Pres. Pro Tem $24,500

Maine .................................

150% of base salary

125% of base salary

112.5% of base salary

Pres. Pro Tem., 100% of base salary

Maryland ..........................

$10,000/yr.

None

None

None

Massachusetts ..................

$35,000

$22,500

$22,500

Asst. maj. and min. ldr., $15,000

Michigan ...........................

$5,513

$26,000

$22,000

Maj. flr. ldr., $12,000; min. flr. ldr., $10,000

Minnesota .........................

None

$43,596 (a)

$43,596 (a)

Asst. maj. ldr., $35,291 (a)

Mississippi ........................

None

None

None

Pro tem resolution, $15,000/yr

Missouri ............................

None

None

None

None

Montana ............................

$5/day during session

None

None

None

Nebraska ...........................

None

None

None

None

Nevada ...............................

$900

$900

$900

Pres. Pro Tem, $900

New Hampshire ................

$50/two-yr term

None

None

None

New Jersey ........................

1/3 above annual salary

None

None

None

New Mexico ......................

None

None

None

None

New York ...........................

$41,500

None

$34,500

22 other leaders with compensation ranging from $13,000 to $34,000

North Carolina .................

$38,151 (a) and $16,956 expense allowance

$17,048 (a) and $7,992 expense allowance

$17,048 (a) and $7,992 expense allowance

Dep. pro tem: $21,739 (a) and $10,032 expense allowance

North Dakota (b) .............

None

$10/day

$10/day

Asst. ldrs., $5/day

$8,835

$8,835

Deputy min. and maj. ldrs., $6,446 year; asst. maj. and min. ldrs. and maj. and min. whips $4,241/yr

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

147


STATE LEGISLATURES

ADDITIONAL COMPENSATION FOR SENATE LEADERS — Continued State or other jurisdiction

Presiding officer

Majority leader President pro tem $73,493

Minority leader

Other leaders

Ohio ...................................

$80,549 base salary

$73,493 salary

Asst. pres. pro tem, $69,227; maj. whip, $64,967; maj.whip, $64,967; asst. min. ldr., $67,099; min. whip, $60,706; asst. min. whip, $54,060

Oklahoma .........................

$17,932

Oregon ...............................

$1,283/mo.

$12,364

$12,364

None

None

None

Pennsylvania ....................

$34,724.08

None

$27,780.58

$27,780.58

Maj. and min. whip, $21,083; maj. and min. caucus chair, $13,145; maj. and min. policy chairs, maj. and min. caucus admin., $8,681

Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

None

None

None

None

Lt. gov. holds this position

None

None

President pro tem, $11,000

South Dakota ....................

None

None

None

None

Tennessee ..........................

$49,500 (a) plus $5,700 home office allowance. Add’l $750/yr of ex officio duties

None

None

None

Texas ..................................

None

None

None

None

Utah ...................................

$2,500

$1,500

$1,500

Maj. whip, asst. maj. whip, min. whip and asst. min. whip, $1,500

Vermont ............................

$593/week during session. No add’l salary

None

None

None

Virginia .............................

None

None

None

None

Washington .......................

Lt. gov. holds this position

$36,064

$36,064

None

West Virginia ....................

$50/day during session

$25/day during session

$25/day during session

Up to 4 add’l people named by pre siding officer receive $100 for a maximum of 30 days.

Wisconsin ..........................

None

None

None

None

Wyoming ...........................

$3/day

None

None

None

Dist. of Columbia .............

$10,000 (council chair)

Not applicable

Not applicable

Not applicable

Guam .................................

None

None

None

None

Puerto Rico .......................

$90,000/yr

$69,000/yr

$69,000/yr

President Pro Tem, $69,000

U.S. Virgin Islands ...........

$10,000

None

None

None

Source: National Conference of State Legislatures, 2003. (a) Total annual salary for this leadership position. (b) House and Senate majority and minority leaders each receive additional compensation of $250.00 per month during their term of office, pursu-

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ant to NDCC Section 54-03-20, in addition to other compensation amounts provided by law during legislative sessions.


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.12 ADDITIONAL COMPENSATION FOR HOUSE LEADERS State or other jurisdiction

Presiding officer

Majority leader None

Minority leader

Other leaders

Alabama ...........................

$2/day plus $1,500/mo. expense allowance

None

None

Alaska ...............................

$500

None

None

None

Arizona .............................

None

None

None

None

Arkansas ..........................

None

None

None

$2,400 Spkr. designate

California .........................

Base plus $14,850

Base plus $7,425

Base plus $14,850

Second ranking minority ldr., $7,425

Colorado ..........................

All leaders receive $99/day salary during interim when in attendance at committee or leadership matters.

Connecticut ......................

$10,689

Delaware ..........................

$16,600

$9,913

$9,913

Maj. and min. whips, $6,243

Florida ..............................

$10,800

None

None

None

Georgia .............................

$6,094.68/mo.

$200/mo.

$200/mo.

Governor’s flr. ldr., $200/mo; asst. flr. ldr.,$100/mo.; spkr. pro tem, $400/mo.

Hawaii ..............................

$37,000

None

None

None

Idaho .................................

$3,000

None

None

None

Illinois ...............................

$22,641

$19,101

$22,641

Dpty. maj. and min., $16,273; asst. maj. and asst. min., $14,856; maj. and min. conference chair, $14,856

Indiana .............................

$6,500

$5,000

$5,500

Speaker pro tem, $5,000; maj. caucus chair, $5,000; min. caucus chair, $4,500; asst. min. flr. leader, $3,500; asst. maj. flr. ldr., $1,000; maj. whip, $3,500; min. whip, $1,500

Iowa ..................................

$11,593

$11,593

$11,593

Speaker pro tem, $1,243

Kansas ..............................

$12,103.78/yr.

$10,919.74/yr.

$10,919.74/yr.

Asst. maj. and min. ldrs., spkr. pro tem, $6,177.68/yr.

Kentucky ..........................

$39.80/day

$31.43/day

$31.43/day

Maj. and min. caucus chairs & whips, $24.09/day

Louisiana .........................

$32,000 (a)

None

None

Speaker pro tem, $24,500 (a)

Maine ................................

150% of base salary

125% of base salary

112.5% of base salary

None

$8,835

$8,835

Dep. spkr., dep. maj. and min. ldrs., $6,446/yr; asst. maj. and min. ldrs.; maj. and min whips,$4,241/yr

Maryland .........................

$10,000/year

None

None

None

Massachusetts .................

$35,000

$22,500

$22,500

Asst. maj. and min. ldr., $15,000

Michigan ..........................

$27,000

None

$22,000

Spkr. pro tem, $5,513; min. flr. ldr., $10,000;maj. flr. ldr., $12,000

Minnesota ........................

$43,596 (a)

$43,596 (a)

$43,596 (a)

None

Mississippi .......................

None

None

None

None

Missouri ...........................

$208.33/mo.

$125/mo.

$125/mo.

None

Montana ...........................

$5/day during session

None

None

None

Nebraska ..........................

None

None

None

None

Nevada ..............................

$900

$900

$900

Speaker pro tem, $900

New Hampshire ...............

$50/two-year term

None

None

None None

New Jersey .......................

1/3 above annual salary

None

None

New Mexico .....................

None

None

None

None

New York ..........................

$41,500

$34,500

$34,500

31 leaders with compensation ranging from $9,000 to $25,000

North Carolina ................

$38,151 (a) and $16,956 expense allowance

$17,048 (a) and $7,992 expense allowance

$17,048 (a) and $7,992 expense allowance

Speaker pro tem, $21,739 and $10,032 expense allowance

North Dakota (b) ............

$10/day

$10/day

$10/day

Asst. ldrs., $5/day

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

149


STATE LEGISLATURES

ADDITIONAL COMPENSATION FOR HOUSE LEADERS — Continued State or other jurisdiction

Presiding officer

Ohio ..................................

$80,549 base salary

Oklahoma ........................

$17,932

Oregon ..............................

$1,283/month

Pennsylvania ...................

$34,724.08

Majority leader $69,227 base salary

Minority leader

Other leaders

$73,493 base salary

Spkr. pro tem, $73,493; asst. maj. ldr., $64,967; asst. min. ldr., $67,099; maj. whip, $60,706; min. whip, $60,706; asst. maj. whip, $56,443; asst. min. whip, $54,060

$12,364

$12,364

Speaker pro tem, $12,364

None

None

None

$27,780.58

$27,780.59

Maj. and min. whips, $21,083; maj. and min. caucus chairs, $13,145; maj. and min. policy chairs, $8,681; maj. and min. caucus admin.,$8,681, maj. and min. caucus secretaries, $8,681 None

Rhode Island ...................

None

None

None

South Carolina ................

$11,000/yr

None

None

Speaker pro tem, $3,600/yr

South Dakota ...................

None

None

None

None

Tennessee .........................

$49,500 (a) plus $5,700/yr home office for allowance. Add’l $750/yr. for ex-officio duties

None

None

None

Texas .................................

None

None

None

None

Utah ..................................

$2,500

$1,500

$1,500

Whips and asst. whips, $1,500

Vermont ...........................

$593/week during session plus an additional $9,172 in salary

None

None

None

Virginia ............................

$18,681

None

None

None

Washington ......................

$40,064 (a)

None

$36,064(a)

None

West Virginia ...................

$50/day during session

$25/day during session

$25/day during session

Up to four add’l people named by presiding officer receive $100 for a maximum of 30 days

Wisconsin .........................

None

None

None

None

Wyoming ..........................

$3/day

None

None

None

District of Columbia .......

$10,000 (chair of council)

Not applicable

Not applicable

Not applicable

Puerto Rico ......................

$90,000/yr.

$69,000/yr.

$69,000/yr.

Speaker pro tem, $69,000

Guam ................................

None

None

None

None

U.S. Virgin Islands ..........

None

None

None

None

Source: National Conference of State Legislatures, 2003. (a) Total annual salary for this leadership position. (b) House and Senate majority and minority leaders each receive additional compensation of $250/mo. during their term of office, pursuant to NDCC Section 54-03-20, in addition to other compensation amounts provided by law during legislative sessions.

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The Book of the States 2005


Optional

Mandatory - except that officials subject to term limits may opt out for a term of office.

Optional. Those elected Arkansas Public before 7/1/99 may have Employees service covered as a Retirement System regular state employee but must have 5 years of regular service to do so.

Alaska ..................................

Arizona ................................

Arkansas .............................

See footnotes at end of table.

Delaware .............................

Mandatory

Mandatory

State Employees Pension Plan

State Employees Retirement System Tier IIA

Age 60, 5 yrs. credited service

Age 60, 25 yrs. credited service; age 62, 10 -25 yrs. credited service; age 62, 5 yrs. actual state service. Reduced benefit available with earlier retirement ages.

PERA: age 65, 5 yrs. service; age 50, 30yrs. service; when age + service equals 80 or more (min. age of 55). DCP: no age requirement & vested immediately

Connecticut .........................

Either Public Employees’ Retirement Association of State Defined Contribution Plan. A choice is not irrevocable.

Legislators elected after 1990 are not eligible for retirement benefits for legislative service.

Mandatory

California ............................

3% of total monthly compensation in excess of $6,000

2%

Employee: 8%

Non-contributory

Employee 7%

Employee 6.75%;

Employee contribution rate

Age 65, 10 yrs. service; or age 55, 12 yrs. service; or any age, 28 yrs. service; any age if serving in the General Assembly on 7/1/79; any age if in elected office on 7/1/79 with 17 and 1/2 yrs. of service. As a regular employee, age 65, 5 yrs. service, or any age and 28 yrs.

Age 65, 5+ yrs. service; age 62, 10+ yrs. service; or 20 yrs. service; earlier retirement with an actuarial reduction of benefits. Vesting at 5 yrs.

Age 60 with 10 yrs.

Requirements for regular retirement

Colorado .............................

Elected Officials Retirement System

Public Employees Retirement System

None available.

Alabama ..............................

Plan name

Participation

State or other jurisdiction

Table 3.13 STATE LEGISLATIVE RETIREMENT BENEFITS

2% times FAS times years of service before 1997 + 1.85% times FAS times years of service from 1997 on . FAS= average of highest 3 years.

(.0133 x avg. annual salary) + (.005 x avg. annual salary in excess of “breakpoint” x credited service up to 35 years. 2003 - $36,400 2004 - $38,600 2005 - $40,900 2006 - $43,400 2007 - $ 46,000 2008 - $48,800 2009 - $51,700 After 2009 - increase breakpoint by 6% per year rounded to nearest $100.

PERA: 2.5% x FAS x yrs. of service, capped at 100% of FAS. DCP benefit depends upon contributions and investment returns.

For service that began after 7/1/99: 2.07% x FAS x years of service. FAS based on three highest consecutive years or service. For service that began after July 1, 1991, $35 x years of service equals monthly benefit.

4% x years of credited service x highest 3 yr. average in the past 10 yrs. The benefit is capped at 80% of FAS. An elected official may purchase service credit in the plan for service earned in a non-elected position by buying it at an actuarially determined amount.

2% (first 10 yrs.); or 2.25% (second 10 yrs.); or 2.5% over 20 x average over 5 highest consecutive yrs. x yrs. of service

Benefit formula

STATE LEGISLATURES

The Council of State Governments

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The Book of the States 2005

DB plan is optional for those serving on April 30, Defined contribution plan optional for those serving on April 30, 1989 and mandatory for those elected or appointed since April 30, 1989.

Optional

Optional

Optional. Those who opt out are covered by the state employees’ plan

None available

Indiana ................................

Iowa .....................................

Kansas .................................

Kentucky .............................

Louisiana ............................

See footnotes at end of table.

Optional

Illinois ..................................

Kentucky Legislator’s Retirement Plan

Public Employees Retirement System

Public Employees Retirement System

Legislator’s Retirement System and Defined Benefit (DB) Plan and Defined Contribution Plan (DC).

Age 65 with five years of service; any age with 30 years of service, and intermediate provisions. Early retirement with reduced benefits.

Age 65, age 62 with 10 yrs. of service or age plus yrs. of service equals 85 pts.

Age 65;age 62 with 20 yrs. service Rule of 88; reduced benefit at 55 with at least 4 years of service.

DB plan: Vesting at 10 yrs. Age 65 with 10 yrs. Of legislative service; or if no longer in the legislature, these options apply: at least 10 yrs. Service; no state salary; at age 55+ Rule of 85 applies; or age 60 with 15 yrs. Of service. Early retirement with reduced benefit. Immediate vesting in the DC plan,

Age 55, 8 yrs. service; or age 62, 4 yrs. service

6.97%

5 yrs. service minimum; age 65 unreduced; age 55 reduced

Mandatory

Idaho ....................................

General Assembly Retirement System

Main plan is non-contributory; 3.5 x yrs. of service as elected official x 7.8% for elected officials’ highest average salary plus annuity based plan for annuity. on contributions as an elected official. Highest average salary = average of 3 highest 12- month periods as elected official.

Age 55 with 5 years of service, any age with 10 years service. Vesting at 5 years.

Public Employees Retirement System; elected officials’ plan

Mandatory

5% of creditable compensation, set by law at $27,500: not the same as actual salary.

4% of salary, (4% annualized salary for Legislators).

3.7% individual;

DC plan: 5% employee, 20% state (of taxable income). DB plan and employer contributions funded by appropriation.

8.5% for retirement; 2% for survivors; 1% for automatic increases; 11.5% total

2.75% of FAS (based on creditable compensation) x years of service. FAS is the average monthly earnings for the 60 months preceding retirement.

3 highest yrs. x 1.75% x yrs. service divided by 12.

2% times FAS x years of service for first 30 years, + 1% times FAS times years in excess of 30 but no more than 5 in excess of 30. FAS is average of 3 highest years.

DB benefit plan monthly benefit: Lesser of (a) $40 x years of General Assembly service completed before November 8, 1989 or (b) 1/12 of the average of the three highest consecutive years of General Assembly service salary. DC plan: numerous options for withdrawing accumulations in accord with IRS regulations. Loans are available. A participant in both plans may receive a benefit from both plans.

3% of each of 1st 4 yrs.; 3.5% for each of next 2 yrs.; 4% for each of next 2 yrs.; 4.5% for each of the next 4 yrs.; 5% for each yr. above 12

Avg. monthly salary for highest 42 consecutive months x 2% x months of credited service.

$32 month for each year of service.

Hawaii .................................

Employee rate 3.75% + $7 month

Vested after 8 yrs.; age 62, with 8 yrs. of service; age 60 with reduction for early retirement.

Georgia Legislative Retirement System

Optional: Choice when first elected.

No employee contribution. DB plan: 3% x years of creditable service x average final Employer contribution for compensation (average of highest 5 yrs). 2003-2004 for legislators DC plan: Dependent upon investment experience. is 11.28% of salary.

Benefit formula

Georgia ................................

Vesting in DB plan, 6 years: in DC plan, 1 year. DB plan: Age 62 with 6 years; 30 years at any age. DC plan: any age

Employee contribution rate

Florida Retirement System

Requirements for regular retirement

Optional. Elected officials may opt out and may choose between DB and DC plans.

Plan name

Florida .................................

Participation

`

152

State or other jurisdiction

STATE LEGISLATIVE RETIREMENT BENEFITS — Continued

STATE LEGISLATURES


The Council of State Governments

Mandatory

Missouri ..............................

See footnotes at end of table.

Mandatory

Mandatory

Minnesota ...........................

Mississippi ..........................

Optional

Michigan .............................

Optional after each election State Retirement or re-election to the System legislator’s plan General Court.

Massachusetts ....................

Missouri State Employee Retirement System

Legislators’ plan within the Public Employees’ Retirement System

Legislators Retirement Plan before 7/1/97; Defined Contribution Plan (DCP) since then.

Legislative Retirement System (DB) for legislators elected before 3/31/97. Others may join the state defined contribution plan.

Age 55; three full biennial assemblies (6 years) or Rule of 80. Vesting at 6 years of service.

Age 60 with 4 or more years of service, or 25 years of service.

LRP: Age 62, 6 yrs. service and fully vested. DCP: age 55 and vested immediately. LRP members do not have Social Security coverage. DCP members have Social Security coverage.

Age 55, 5 yrs. or age plus service equals 70

Age 55 with 6 years Service; unreduced benefit at 65. Vesting at 6 years. Reduced benefits for retirement before age 65.

Age 60, with 8 yrs.; age 50, 8+yrs creditable service (early reduced retirement)

State Legislator’s Pension Plan

Optional

Age 60 (if 10 yrs. of service on 7/1/93) and age 62 (if less than 10 yrs. of service on 7/1/93). Reduced benefit available for earlier retirement.

Requirements for regular retirement

Maine State Retirement Plan

Maryland ............................

Plan name

Mandatory

Participation

`

Maine ...................................

State or other jurisdiction

STATE LEGISLATIVE RETIREMENT BENEFITS — Continued

Benefit formula

3% of legislative salary for each yr of service up to a max. of 22 yrs. 3 months. Benefits are recalculated when legislative salaries are changed.

2% of average final compensation (the average of the 3 high salary years) times years of service.

Non-contributory

Regular: 7.25% state 9.75% to 10.75 effective July 1, 2005 Supplement for legislative service: 3%/6.33%

Monthly pay divided by 24 x years of creditable service, capped at 100% of salary. Benefit is adjusted by the percentage increase in pay for an active legislator.

Legislators who qualify for regular state retirement benefits also automatically qualify for the legislators’ supplemental benefits. Regular: 2% times FAS times years of service up to and including 25 years of service + 2.5% times FAS times service in excess of 25 years FAS is based on the high 4 years. Supplement: 1% times FAS times years of legislative service through 25 years, + 1.25% times FAS times years of service in excess of 25.

LRP: 9% 2.7% x high 5 yr. avg. salary x length of service (yrs.) DCP: 4% from member, DCP benefit depends upon contributions and investment return. 6% from state.

7%-13% For DB plans, various provisions, depending on when For the DC plan, service started. For the DC plan, benefits depend upon the state contributes 4% contributions and earnings. of salary. Members may contribute up to 3% of salary. The state will match the member’s contribution in addition to the state 4% contribution.

9%. Some legislators are 2.5 times years of service times FAS. FAS = average of grandfathered at highest 36 months. Service credit is allowed for membership in lower rates. other Massachusetts retirement plans.

5% of annual salary

7.65% legislators; employer contribution is actuarially determined.

Employee contribution rate

STATE LEGISLATURES

153


154

The Book of the States 2005

See footnotes at end of table.

Legislators may retain membership as regular public employees if they have that status when elected; one time option to join Elected Officials’ Plan.

Mandatory

North Carolina ...................

Oklahoma ...........................

Mandatory

New York .............................

None available.

Optional

New Mexico ........................

Optional

Mandatory

New Jersey ..........................

North Dakota .....................

None available

New Hampshire ..................

Ohio .....................................

None available

Mandatory

Nebraska .............................

Nevada .................................

Optional

Participation

Montana ..............................

State or other jurisdiction

` Public Employee Retirement System, as regular member or elected official member. [Information here is for the Elected Officials’ Plan.]

Public Employees Retirement System

Legislative Retirement System

New York State and Local Retirement System

Legislative Retirement Plan

Public Employees’ Retirement System

Public Employees Retirement System. Either a DB or a DC plan is available.

Plan name

STATE LEGISLATIVE RETIREMENT BENEFITS — Continued

Elected Officials’ Plan: Age 60 with 6 years service vesting at 6 years.

Age 60 with 5 years service or 55 with 25 years service or at any age with 30 years service

Age 65 with 5 years of service; reduced benefit available at earlier ages.

Age 62 with 5 years of service; 55 with 30 years; reduced benefit available at 55/5. Vesting at 5 years.

Plans 1A and 1B: Age 65 with 5 years of service; 64/8; 63/11; 60/12; or any age with 14 years of service. Plan 2: 65 with five years of service or at any age with 10 years of service.

Benefit formula

Plan 1A: $250 per year of service. Plan 1B: $500 per year of service after 1959. Plan 2: 11 percent of the IRS per diem rate in effect on December 31st of the year a legislator retires x 60 x the years of credited service. For a legislator who retired in 2003 the benefit would be $957 per year of credited service. Annual 3% COLA.

3% x Final Average Salary x years of service. FAS = higher of three highest years or three final years. Benefit is capped at 2/3 of FAS, Other formulas apply if a legislator also has other service covered by the Public Employee Retirement System.

Number of years x $25 = monthly allowance

DB plan: 1/56 times years of service times FAS. Early retirement with reduced benefits is available. DC plan: Employee contributions and earnings are immediately vested. Employer contributions and earnings are vested after 5 years.

Highest annual compensation x 4.02% x years of service.

Optional contribution of 4.5%, 6%, 7.5%, 8.5%, 9%, or 10% of total compensation.

Avg. participating salary x length of service x computation factor depending on optional contributions ranging from 1.9% for a 4.5% contribution to 4% for a 10% contribution.

8.5% of gross salary. 2.2% of final average salary times years of service up to and A 10% contribution through 30 years of service. 2.5% starting with the 31st year of rate for legislators will service and every year thereafter. be phased in over three years starting in 2006.

7%

3% for first 10 years of Tier 4: 2% x final average salary (average of 3 highest membership consecutive years) x years of service to 30 years; multiplier (Tier 4 provisions). of 1.5% after 30 years For members who retire with fewer than 20 years of service, the multiplier is 1.67.

Plan 1A: $100 per year for service after 1959 Plan 1B: $200 per year (now closed to new enrollments). Plan 2: $500/year

5% of salary

15% of session salary

Age 60, 10 yrs. service

Age 60; no minimum service requirement. Early retirement with no benefit reduction with 25 years of service. Vesting at 8 years.

6.9% for DB plan. Employer contribution of 4.19% plus employee contribution of 6.9 % for DC plan.

Employee contribution rate

Vesting at 5 years Age 60 with at least 5 years service; age 65 regardless of years of service; or 30 years of service regardless of age

Requirements for regular retirement

STATE LEGISLATURES


7.5%

The Council of State Governments

Optional

West Virginia ......................

See footnotes at end of table.

Optional. If before an election the legislator belonged to a state public retirement plan, he or she may continue in that by making contributions. Otherwise the new legislator may join PERS Plan 2 or Plan 3.

Washington ......................... See column to left. PERS plan 2 is a DB plan. PERS plan 3 is a hybrid DB/DC plan.

None available. Deferred compensation plan available.

Governors’ and Legislators’ Retirement Plan

Mandatory

Mandatory

Utah .....................................

Employee Retirement System: Elected Class Members

Vermont ..............................

Optional

Texas ....................................

Virginia ...............................

None available.

Optional

South Dakota ......................

Tennessee ............................

South Carolina Retirement System

Age 55, if yrs. of service+age equal 80

PERS plan 2: Age 65 with 5 years of service credit. Plan 3: Age 65 with 10 years of service credit for the DB side of the plan; immediate benefits (subject to federal restrictions) on the DC side of the plan. The member may choose various options for investment of contributions to the DC plan.

Age 50, 30 yrs. service (unreduced); age 55, 5 yrs. service; age 50, 10 yrs. service (reduced)

Age 62 with 10 years and an actuarial reduction; age 65 with 4 years of service for full benefits.

1.7% of average final compensation x yrs. of service

$24.80/month (as of July 2004) x years of service; adjusted semi-annually according to consumer price index up to a maximum increase of 2%.

2.3% x district judge’s salary x length of service, with the monthly benefit capped at a the level of a district judge’s salary, and adjusted when such salaries are increased. Various annuity options are available. Military service credit may be purchased to add to elective class service membership.

$70 per month x yrs. service with a $1,375 monthly cap

4.82% of annual compensation x yrs. service

3% x final avg. salary x credited yrs. of service (x withdrawal factor if under regular retirement age —50 for legislators).

4.5% gross income

2% of final avg. salary x yrs. Service. Final avg. salary is based on 3 highest yrs. out of last 10 yrs.

PERS plan 2: Employee PERS plan 2: 2% x years of service credit x average final contribution of 2.43% for compensation. 2002. Estimated at Plan 3: DB is 1% x service credit years x average final 2005-2007. compensation. DC benefit depends upon the value of 3.33% for Plan 3: accumulations. No required member contribution for the DB component. The member may contribute from 5% to 15% of salary to the DC component.

8.91% of creditable compensation

Non-contributory

8%

5.43%

Age 55, 4 yrs. service Age 60, 8 yrs. service; age 50, 12 yrs. service. Vesting at 8 years.

10%

Age 60, 8 yrs. service; 30 yrs. of service regardless of age

Legislators elected after January 1995 are ineligible for retirement benefits based on legislative service. (a)

Age 50, 3 yrs. service, any age with 35 years of service; early retirement with reduced benefit.

State Employees’ Retirement System

Benefit formula

16.317% of subject wages 1.67% x yrs. service and final avg. monthly salary

Employee contribution rate

Mandatory, but members may opt out six months after being sworn into office.

Age 55, 30+ yrs. Service, 5 years vesting.

Requirements for regular retirement

Public Employee Retirement System legislator plan

Plan name

Rhode Island ......................

Optional

Pennsylvania ......................

`

South Carolina ...................

Optional

Participation

Oregon .................................

State or other jurisdiction

STATE LEGISLATIVE RETIREMENT BENEFITS — Continued

STATE LEGISLATURES

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The Book of the States 2005

Optional

Optional

Optional

Puerto Rico .........................

Guam ...................................

U.S. Virgin Islands ............. Age 60, 10 yrs. service

Age 60, 30 yrs. service; age 55, 15 yrs. service

Retirement System of After 1990, age 65 with 30 the Employees of the years of service. Government of Puerto Rico

8%

5% or 8.5%

8.28%

Before 10/1/87, 7%; after 10/1/87, 5%

Age 62, 5 yrs. service; age 55, 30 yrs. service; age 60, 20 yrs. service

At age 60 with at least 10 yrs. of service, at 2.5% for each

An amount equal to 2% of avg. annual salary for each of the first 10 yrs. of credited service and 2.5% of avg. annual salary for each yr. or part thereof of credited service over 10 yrs.

1.5% of average earnings multiplied by the number of years of accredited service.

Multiply high 3 yrs. average pay by indicator under applicable yrs. months of service.

2.6% of salary in 2003: Higher benefit of formula (2.165% x years of service x salary adjusted annually for service before 2000; 2% x years of service x salary for service 2000 and after) or money-purchase calculation.

Age 62 normal; age 57 with 30 years of service.

Source: National Conference of State Legislatures, November 2004. Note: The following states do not have legislative retirement benefits: Alabama, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming. Key: N.A.—Not available (a) Constitution has been amended effective 1/95. Any legislator elected after this date is not eligible to join the State Retirement System, but will be compensated for $10,000/yr. with cost of living increases to be adjusted annually.

None available

Mandatory

Wyoming ..............................

Dist. of Columbia ...............

Mandatory

Wisconsin ............................

`

STATE LEGISLATIVE RETIREMENT BENEFITS — Continued

STATE LEGISLATURES


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.14 BILL PRE-FILING, REFERENCE AND CARRYOVER Bill referral restricted by rule (a)

Bills referred to committee by: State or other jurisdiction

Pre-filing of bills allowed (b)

Alabama ........................ Alaska ............................ Arizona .......................... Arkansas ....................... California ......................

★(d) ★ ★ ★ ★

Colorado ....................... Connecticut ................... Delaware ....................... Florida ........................... Georgia ..........................

Senate

House/Assembly

(e) (f) President President President Rules Cmte.

Speaker Speaker Speaker Speaker Rules Cmte.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

President Pres. Pro Tempore Pres. Pro Tempore President President (f)

Speaker Speaker Speaker Speaker Speaker

Hawaii ........................... Idaho .............................. Illinois ............................ Indiana .......................... Iowa ...............................

(j) ... ★ ★(o) ★

President President (e) Rules Cmte. Pres. Pro Tempore President

Speaker Speaker Rules Cmte. Speaker Speaker

Kansas ........................... Kentucky ....................... Louisiana ...................... Maine ............................. Maryland ......................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

President Cmte. on Cmtes. President (l) Secy. of Senate and Clerk of President

Speaker Cmte. on Cmtes. Speaker (l) House (n) Speaker

Massachusetts .............. Michigan ....................... Minnesota ..................... Mississippi .................... Missouri ........................

★ ... ... ★ ★

Clerk Majority Ldr. President President (e) Pres. Pro Tempore

Clerk Speaker Speaker Speaker Speaker

Montana ........................ Nebraska ....................... Nevada ........................... New Hampshire ............ New Jersey ....................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★(m)

President Reference Cmte. (q) President President

Speaker U (q) Speaker Speaker

New Mexico .................. New York ....................... North Carolina ............. North Dakota ............... Ohio ...............................

★(k) ★ ... ★ ★

(r) Pres. Pro Tempore (s) Rules Chairman President (e) Reference Cmte.

Oklahoma ..................... Oregon ........................... Pennsylvania ................ Rhode Island ................ South Carolina .............

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

South Dakota ................ Tennessee ...................... Texas .............................. Utah ............................... Vermont ........................

Senate

House/Assembly

Bill carryover allowed (c)

L L, M L L L

L L, M L L ...

... ★ ... ... ★(h)

L, M (i) M ... L, M ...

L (i) M ... M ...

... ... ... ... ★

... L ... ... M

... L ... ... M

★ ... ★ ... ★

L L L L L

L L L L L

★ ... ... ★ ...

M ... L, M L L

M ... L, M L L

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... U ... L, M ...

... ★(p) ... ★ ★

Speaker L, M Speaker M Speaker M Speaker M Rules & Reference Cmte. L

M M M M L

... ★ ★ ... ★

Majority Leader President President Pro Tempore President President

Speaker Speaker Speaker Speaker Speaker

L L L M M

... H M M M

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ (g)

President Speaker President President President

Speaker Speaker Speaker Speaker Speaker

... ... L ... M

... ... L ... M

... ★ ... ... ★

Virginia ......................... Washington ................... West Virginia ................ Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming .......................

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Clerk (v) President President President

Clerk (u) (v) Speaker Speaker Speaker

L ... L, M ... M

L ... L, M ... M

★ ★ ★(j) ★(p) ...

Puerto Rico ...................

...

President

Secretary

M

M

...

... L L (t) M ...

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

157


STATE LEGISLATURES

BILL PRE-FILING, REFERENCE AND CARRYOVER — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003 and October 2004. Key: ★— Yes . . . —No L—Rules generally require all bills be referred to the appropriate committee of jurisdiction. M — Rules require specific types of bills be referred to specific committees (e.g., appropriations, local bills). U—Unicameral legislature. (a) Legislative rules specify all or certain bills go to committees of jurisdiction. (b) Unless otherwise indicated by footnote, bills may be introduced prior to convening each session of the legislature. In this column only: ★ —prefiling is allowed in both chambers (or in the case of Nebraska, in the unicameral legislature); . . . — pre-filing is not allowed in either chamber. (c) Bills carry over from the first year of the legislature to the second (does not apply in Alabama, Arkansas, Montana, Nevada, North Dakota, Oregon and Texas, where legislatures meet biennially). Bills generally do not carry over after an intervening legislative election. (d) Except between the end of the last regular session of the legislature in any quadrennium and the organizational session following the general election and special session. (e) Lieutenant governor is the president of the Senate. (f) Senate bills by president with concurrence of president pro tem, if no concurrence by rules committee. House bills by president pro tem with concurrence of president, if no concurrence, by rules committee. (g) Bills are drafted prior to session but released starting first day of session. (h) Bills introduced in the first year of the regular session and passed by the house of origin on or before the January 31st constitutional deadline a r e carryover bills.

158

The Book of the States 2005

(i) In either house, state law requires any bill which affects the sentencing of criminal offenders and which would result in a net increase of imprisonment in state correctional facilities must be assigned to the appropriations committee of the house in which it was introduced. In the Senate, a bill must be referred to the Appropriations Committee if it contains an appropriation from the state treasury or the increase of any salary. Each bill which provides that any state revenue be devoted to any purpose other than that to which is devoted under existing law must be referred to the Finance Committee. (j) House only in even-numbered years. (k) In the House only. (l) Subject to approval or disapproval. Louisiana–majority members present. (m) Prior to convening of first regular session only. (n) For the joint standing committee system. Secretary of the Senate and clerk of House, after conferring, suggest an appropriate committee reference for every bill, resolve and petition offered in either house. If they are unable to agree, the question of reference is referred to a conference of the president of the Senate and speaker of the House. If the presiding officers cannot agree, the question is resolved by the Legislative Council. (o) Only in the Senate. (p) Any bill, joint resolution on which final action has not been taken at the conclusion of the last general-business floor period in the odd-numbered year shall be carried forward to the even-numbered year. (q) Motion for referral can be made by any member. (r) Senator introducing the bill endorses the name of the committee to which the bill is referred. If an objection is made, the Senate determines the committee to which the bill is referred. (s) Also serves as majority leader. (t) Suspension of rule - Majority of elected members. (u) Under the direction of the speaker. (v) By the membership of the chamber.


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.15 TIME LIMITS ON BILL INTRODUCTION State or other jurisdiction

Time limit on introduction of bills

Procedures for granting exception to time limits

Alabama ........................

House: no limit. Senate: 22nd day of regular session (a).

Unanimous vote to suspend rules.

Alaska ............................

35th C day of 2nd regular session.

Introduction by committee or by suspension of operation of limiting rule.

Arizona ..........................

House: 29th day of regular session; 10th day of special session. Senate: 22nd day of regular session; 10th day of special session.

House: Permission of rules committee. Senate: Permission of President.

Arkansas ........................

55th day of regular session (50th day for appropriations bills).

2/3 vote of membership of each house.

California ......................

Deadlines established by rules committee

Approval of rules committee and 2/3 vote of membership.

Colorado ........................

House: 22nd C day of regular session. Senate: 17th C day of regular session (b).

House and Senate: Committees on delayed bills may extend deadline.

Connecticut ...................

10 days into session in odd-numbered years, 3 days into session in even-numbered years (c).

2/3 vote of members present.

Delaware ........................

House: no limit. Senate: no limit.

Florida ...........................

House: noon of the first day of regular session. Senate: noon first day of regular session (b)(e).

Georgia ..........................

Only for specific types of bills

Hawaii ............................

Actual dates established during session.

Majority vote of membership.

Idaho ..............................

House: 20th day of session (d); 36th day of session (f). Senate: 12th day of session (d); 36th day of session (f).

House and Senate: Speaker/President Pro Tempore may designate any standing committee to serve as a privileged committee temporarily.

Illinois ............................

House: determined by speaker (b)(d). Senate: determined by president.

House: rules governing limitations may not be suspended except for bills determined by a majority of members of the Rules Comm. to be an emergency bill, & appropriations bills implementing the budget. Senate: Rules may be suspended by a majority vote of members.

Indiana ...........................

House and Senate: mid-January.

House: 2/3 vote.

Iowa ...............................

House: Friday of 6th week of 1st regular session (d)(g)( i); Friday of 2nd week of 2nd regular session (d)(g)(h). Senate: Friday of 7th week of 1st regular session (d)(g); Friday of 2nd week of 2nd regular session (d)(g).

Constitutional majority.

Kansas ...........................

Actual dates established suring session

Resolution adopted by majority of members of either house may make specific exceptions to deadlines.

Kentucky .......................

House: After 14th L day of odd-year session, during last 22 L days of even-year session Senate: After 14th L day of odd-year session, during last 20 L days of even-year session

Majority vote of membership of each house.

Louisiana .......................

30th C day of odd-year session; 10th C day of even-year session.

2/3 vote of elected members of each house.

Maine .............................

1st Wednesday in December of 1st regular session; deadlines for 2nd regular session established by Legislative Council.

Approval of majority of members of Legislative Council.

Maryland .......................

No introductions during last 35 C days of regular session.

2/3 vote of elected members of each house.

Massachusetts ...............

1st Wednesday in December even-numbered years, 1st Wednesday in November odd-numbered years.

2/3 vote of members present and voting.

Michigan ........................

No limit.

Minnesota ......................

No limit

Must follow committee deadline process.

Mississippi .....................

14th C day in 90 day session; 49th C day in 125 day session (o).

2/3 vote of members present and voting.

Missouri .........................

House: 60th L day of regular session. Senate: March 1.

Majority vote of elected members each house; governor’s request for consideration of bill by special message.

Montana ........................

General bills & resolutions: 10th L day; revenue bills: 17th L day; committee bills and resolutions: 36th L day; committee bills implementing provisions of a general appropriation act: 75th L day; committee revenue bills: 62nd L day interim study resolutions: 75th L day (b)(i).

2/3 vote of members.

Nebraska ........................

10th L day of any session (b).

3/5 vote of elected membership.

Nevada ...........................

Actual dates established at start of session.

Waiver granted by Senate Majority Floor Leader or Assembly Speaker.

New Hampshire ............

Actual dates established during session.

2/3 vote of members present.

New Jersey .....................

Assembly: No limit. Senate: no limit.

Majority vote of members.

Existence of an emergency reasonably compelling consideration notwithstanding the deadline.

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

159


STATE LEGISLATURES

TIME LIMITS ON BILL INTRODUCTION — Continued State or other jurisdiction

Time limit on introduction of bills

Procedures for granting exception to time limits

New Mexico ...................

30th L day of odd-year session (j); 15th L day of even-year session (j).

None.

New York .......................

Assembly: for unlimited introduction of bills, 1st Tuesday in March; for introduction of 10 or fewer bills, last Tuesday in March (k)(l). Senate: 1st Tuesday in March (l)(m).

Unanimous vote.

North Carolina ..............

Actual dates established during session.

Senate: 2/3 vote of membership present and voting shall be required.

North Dakota ................

House: 10th L day. Senate: 15th L day.

2/3 vote or approval of majority of Committee on Delayed Bills.

Ohio ...............................

No limit.

Oklahoma ......................

Time limit set in rules.

2/3 vote of membership.

Oregon ...........................

House: 36th C day of session (k). Senate: 36th C day of session.

2/3 vote of membership.

Pennsylvania .................

No limit.

Rhode Island .................

2nd Tuesday in February.

Simple majority vote.

South Carolina ..............

House: Prior to April 15 of the 2nd yr. of a two-yr. legislative session; May 1 for bills first introduced in Senate. Senate: May 1 of regular session for bills originating in House.

House: 2/3 vote of members present and voting. Senate: 2/3 vote of membership.

South Dakota .................

40-day session: 15th L day; committee bills and joint resolutions, 16th L day. 35-day session: 10th L day; committee bills and joint resolutions, 11th L day.

2/3 vote of membership.

Tennessee .......................

House: general bills, 10th L day of regular session (m). Senate: general bills, 10th L day or regular session; resolutions, 40th L day (m).

Unanimous consent of Committee on Delayed Bills, or upon motion approved by 2/3 vote of members present.

Texas ..............................

60th C day of regular session.

4/5 vote of members present and voting.

Utah ...............................

12:00 p.m. on 11th day of general session.

Motion for request must be approved by 2/3 vote of members.

Vermont .........................

House: 1st session - last day of February; 2nd session. last day of January. Senate: 1st session - 53 C day; 2nd session 25 C days before start of session.

Approval by Rules Committee.

Virginia ..........................

Deadlines may be set during session.

Washington ....................

(Constitutional limit) No introductions during final 10 days of regular session (n).

2/3 vote of elected members of each house.

West Virginia .................

House: 45th C day. Senate: 41st C day.

2/3 vote of members present.

Wisconsin ......................

No limit.

Wyoming .......................

House: 15th L day of session. Senate: 12th L day of session

2/3 vote of elected members.

Puerto Rico ....................

1st session - within first 125 days; 2nd session - within first 60 days.

None.

Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003 and October 2004. Key: C — Calendar L — Legislative (a) Not applicable to local bills, advertised or otherwise. (b) Not applicable to appropriations bills. In West Virginia, supplementary appropriations bills or budget bills. (c) Not applicable to (1) bills providing for current government expenditures; (2) bills the presiding officers certify are of an emergency nature; (3) bills the governor requests because of emergency or necessity; and (4) the legislative commissioners’ revisor’s bills and omnibus validating act. (d) Not applicable to standing committee bills. (e) Not applicable to local bills and joint resolutions. Florida: Not applicable to local bills (which have no deadline) or claim bills (deadline is August 1 of the year preceding consideration or within 60 days of a senator’s election). (f) Not applicable to House State Affairs, Appropriations, Education, Revenue and Taxation, or Ways and Means committees, nor to Senate State Affairs, Finance, or Judiciary and Rules committees. (g) Unless written request for drafting bill has been filed before deadline.

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(h) Not applicable to bills co-sponsored by majority and minority floor leaders. (i) Only certain measures may be considered in the Short Session- primarily those relating to appropriations, finance, pensions and retirement and localities; certain legislation from the 2001 Session; and legislation proposed by study commissions. (j) Final date for consideration on floor in house of origin during first session. Bills introduced after date are not placed on calendar for consideration until second session. (k) Not applicable to measures approved by Committee on Legislative Rules and Reorganization or by speaker; appropriation or fiscal measures sponsored by committees on Appropriations; true substitute measures sponsored by standing, special or joint committees; or measures drafted by legislative counsel. (l) Resolutions fixing the last day for introduction of bills in the House are referred to the Rules Committee before consideration by the full House. (m) Not applicable to certain local bills. (n) Not applicable to substitute bills reported by standing committees for bills pending before such committees. (o) Not applicable to Revenue & Appropriations and Local & Private bills. Time limits for those bills are: 51st calendar day (90-day session) and 86th calendar day (125-day session).


The Council of State Governments

... ... ... ★ ★ ... ★ ... ... ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ (hh) ... ... ★ ... ... ... ... ★ ... ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ (ff) ★ ★ ... ★

★ (f) ★ ★ (f) ... ★

★ (hh) ★ (hh) ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ (v) ... ... ★ (f)

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii (l) ............................ Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana (l) ....................... Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana (l) ......................... Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

See footnotes at end of table.

... ... ★ ... ...

... ★ ★ ★ (hh)

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Other (b)

Amount

State or other jurisdiction

Governor may item veto appropriation bills

5 5 (o) 10 6 5

3 (ee) 10 10 3 10

10 (h) 5 5 5 45 (h)(w)

10 14 (h) 3 5 15

10 (h) 10 10 (h) 10 6

10 (o)(p) 5 60 (h) 7 3

10 (h) 5 10P 7 (h)(p) 6

6 (e) 15P 5 5 12

Bill becomes law unless vetoed

During session

15A 30A (o) 30A, 10P 10A (m)

(kk) 30A 15A

25A (h) 5A, 5P 10A 5P (w)

14A, 3P 15P (m) 45A

10P

10P 90A 20P (h) 10P 30P (m)

45A (o)(p) 10A 60P (h) 7P (r)

30A (h) 15P 10P 15P (h) 40A

20P 10A 20A 30A

Bill becomes law unless vetoed

After session

(i)

15A

10A

20A 30A

(w)

10A 14P (h) 3A, 14P

110P

(r)

(p)

30A

10A

Bill dies unless signed

Days allowed governor to consider bill (a)

Table 3.16 ENACTING LEGISLATION: VETO,VETO OVERRIDE AND EFFECTIVE DATE

2/3 elected (g) 2/3 present 2/3 elected 3/5 present 2/3 elected

2/3 present 2/3 elected 3/5 elected 2/3 elected 3/5 elected (ii)

2/3 present 3/5 elected 2/3 elected 2/3 present 2/3 elected

2/3 present 2/3 elected and serving 2/3 elected 2/3 elected 2/3 elected

2/3 membership Majority elected 2/3 elected 2/3 present 3/5 elected

2/3 elected 2/3 present 3/5 elected (g) Majority elected 2/3 elected

2/3 elected 2/3 elected 3/5 elected 2/3 present 2/3 elected

Majority elected 2/3 elected (g) 2/3 elected Majority elected 2/3 elected

Votes required in each house to pass bills or items over veto (c)

90 days after adjournment January 1st of following year. (jj) 60 days after signed by governor Immediately Date of signature

90 days after adjournment 20 days after enactment 60 days after adjournment (x) 91st day after filing with secretary of state

Oct. 1 (t) 90 days following adjournment Oct. 1 60 days after enactment July 4; other dates usually specified

90 days after enactment 90 days after adjournment Aug. 1 (t) July 1 August 28 (u)

Upon publication 90 days after adjournment Aug. 15 90 days after adjournment June 1 (s)

Immediately July 1 (n) (q) July 1 (n)

90 days after adjournment (k) (gg) Immediately 60 days after adjournment July 1 for generals, date signed by governor for locals

Date signed by governor 90 days after enactment 90 days after adjournment 91st day after adjournment (j)

Effective date of enacted legislation (d)

STATE LEGISLATURES

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162

The Book of the States 2005 ★ ... ... ... ... ★ ★ (hh) ★ ★ ... ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ (f) ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

See footnotes at end of table.

Other (b)

Amount

State or other jurisdiction

Governor may item veto appropriation bills

10 10 40 (h)(dd) 10 10

7 (h) 5 5P 6P 3

5P

5 10 10P

Bill becomes law unless vetoed

During session

20A 15A (aa) 6P 15A

15P 10A 20A 60A (h)

Bill becomes law unless vetoed

After session

30P 30P (h)

30A 30P

30A (h)

3A

Bill dies unless signed

Days allowed governor to consider bill (a)

ENACTING LEGISLATION: VETO,VETO OVERRIDE AND EFFECTIVE DATE — Continued

2/3 elected 2/3 elected 2/3 elected 2/3 elected 2/3 elected

2/3 present (y) 2/3 present Majority elected 2/3 present 2/3 elected

2/3 elected Majority elected 2/3 elected 2/3 elected 2/3 present

Votes required in each house to pass bills or items over veto (c)

60 days after adjournment (bb) Immediately (cc) Immediately Specified in act Immediately

July 1 (z) 90 days after adjournment 90 days after enactment Day after publication date unless otherwise specified Specified in act

July 1 40 days after enactment 90 days after adjournment 60 days after adjournment July 1

Effective date of enacted legislation (d)

STATE LEGISLATURES


Source: The Council of State Governments’ surveys, October 2003 and October 2004. Note: Some legislatures reconvene after normal session to consider bills vetoed by governor. Connecticut–if governor vetoes any bill, secretary of state must reconvene General Assembly on second Monday after the last day on which governor is either authorized to transmit or has transmitted every bill with his objections, whichever occurs first; General Assembly must adjourn sine die not later than three days after its reconvening. Hawaii–legislature may reconvene on 45th day after adjournment sine die, in special session, without call. Louisiana–legislature meets in a maximum five-day veto session on the 40th day after final adjournment. Missouri–if governor returns any bill on or after the fifth day before the last day on which legislature may consider bills (in even-numbered years), legislature automatically reconvenes on first Wednesday following the second Monday in September for a maximum 10-calendar day session. New Jersey–legislature meets in special session (without call or petition) to act on bills returned by governor on 45th day after sine die adjournment of the regular session; if the second year expires before the 45th day, the day preceding the end of the legislative year. Utah–if two-thirds of the members of each house favor reconvening to consider vetoed bills, a maximum fiveday session is set by the presiding officers. Virginia–legislature reconvenes on sixth Wednesday after adjournment for a maximum three-day session (may be extended to seven days upon vote of majority of members elected to each house). Washington–upon petition of two-thirds of the members of each house, legislature meets 45 days after adjournment for a maximum five-day session. Key: ★—Yes . . . —No A—Days after adjournment of legislature. P—Days after presentation to governor. (a) Sundays excluded, unless otherwise indicated. (b) Includes language in appropriations bill. (c) Bill returned to house of origin with governor’s objections. (d) Effective date may be established by the law itself or may be otherwise changed by vote of the legislature. Special or emergency acts are usually effective immediately. (e) Except bills presented within five days of final adjournment. (f) Governor can also reduce amounts in appropriations bills. In Hawaii, governor can reduce items in executive appropriations measures, but cannot reduce nor item veto amounts appropriated for the judicial or legislative branches. (g) Different number of votes required for revenue and appropriations bills. Alaska–three-fourths elected. Illinois–appropriations reductions, majority elected. Oklahoma–emergency bills, three-fourths vote. (h) Sundays included. (i) Last day of two year session. (j) For legislation enacted in regular sessions: January of the following year. For legislation enacted in special sessions: Immediately upon chaptering by Secretary of State. (k) An act takes effect on the date stated in the act, or if no date is stated in the act, then on its passage. (l) Constitution withholds right to veto constitutional amendments. (m) Bills vetoed after adjournment are returned to the legislature for reconsideration. Maryland–reconsidered at the next meeting of the same General Assembly. Mississippi–returned within three days after the beginning of the next session. South Carolina–within two days after the next meeting. (n) Effective date for bills which become law on or after July 1. Illinois–a bill passed after May 31 cannot

take effect before June 1 of the next calendar year unless legislature by a three-fifths vote in each house, the bill provides for an earlier effective date. Iowa–if governor signs bill after July 1, bill becomes law on Aug. 15; for special sessions, 90 days after adjournment. (o) Except Sundays and legal holidays. In Hawaii, except Saturdays, Sundays, holidays and any days in which the legislature is in recess prior to its adjournment. In Oregon, except Saturdays and Sundays. (p) The governor must notify the legislature 10 days before the 45th day of his intent to veto a measure on that day. The legislature may convene on the 45th day after adjournment to consider the vetoed measures. If the legislature fails to reconvene, the bill does not become law. If the legislature reconvenes, it may pass the measure over the governor’s veto or it may amend the law to meet the governor’s objections. If the law is amended, the governor must sign the bill within 10 days after it is presented to him in order for it to become law. (q) Varies with date of the veto. (r) Any bill presented to the governor within the last three days of a session must be acted on within 30 days after adjournment. (s) Bills passed over governor’s veto take effect 30 days after veto override or on date specified in bill, whichever is later. (t) Different date for fiscal legislation. Minnesota, Montana–July 1. (u) If bill has an emergency clause, it becomes effective upon governor’s signature. (v) No appropriation can be made in excess of the recommendations contained in the governor’s budget except by a three-fifths vote. The excess is subject to veto by the governor. (w) On the 45th day after the date of presentation, a bill becomes law unless the governor returns it with his objections, except that (1) if the legislature is in adjournment sine die on the 45th day, a special session is convened (without petition or call) for the sole purpose of acting upon bills returned by the governor; (2) any bill passed between the 45th day and the 10th day preceding the end of the second legislative year must be returned by the governor by the day preceding the end of the second legislative year; (3) any bill passed or reenacted within 10 days preceding the expiration of the second legislative year becomes law if signed prior to the seventh day following such expiration, or the governor returns it to the house of origin and two-thirds elected members agree to pass the bill prior to such expiration. (x) August 1 after filing with the secretary of state. Appropriations and tax bills July 1 after filing with secretary of state, or date set in legislation by Legislative Assembly, or by date established by emergency clause. (y) Must include majority of elected members. (z) Special sessions–first day of fourth month after adjournment. (aa) Five days for supplemental appropriation bills. (bb) Laws required to be approved only by the governor. An act required to be approved by the U.S. Secretary of the Interior only after it is vetoed by the governor and so approved takes effect 40 days after it is returned to the governor by the secretary. (cc) U.S. Congress may annul. (dd) Twenty days for appropriations bills. (ee) Except bills going up in the last three days of session, for which the governor has 20 days. (ff) Must veto entire amount of any item; an item is an indivisible sum of money dedicated to a stated purpose. (gg) No set date. Each section of each bill has an effective date determined by bill sponsor or sponsors. (hh) Line item veto. (ii) Except for bills needing 2/3 majority for original passage. (jj) Unless emergency declared or date specific in text of measure. (kk) Following adjournment of the legislature, the governor has 30 days to sign or veto bills delivered to him. If no action is taken, the bill does not become law (pocket veto).

ENACTING LEGISLATION: VETO,VETO OVERRIDE AND EFFECTIVE DATE — Continued

STATE LEGISLATURES

The Council of State Governments

163


STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.17 LEGISLATIVE APPROPRIATIONS PROCESS: BUDGET DOCUMENTS AND BILLS Budget document submission

Budget bill introduction

Submission date relative to convening Within two weeks

Within one month

Over one month

Same time as budget document

Another time

Not until committee review of budget document

★ (a) ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

★(b) ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... (a)

... ... ... ... ...

... (a) ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ★

76th day by rule ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

30 days ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... (a)

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ★ ...

... ★ ... ... ★(c)

... ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... (f) ... ...

... ... (f) (a) ★(e)

★ (e) (a) ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ (g) ★ ★(h)

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Massachusetts .............. Michigan ....................... Minnesota ..................... Mississippi .................... Missouri ........................

... ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ (e) ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ★

Montana ....................... Nebraska ....................... Nevada .......................... New Hampshire ........... New Jersey ....................

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ (a) ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ★ (e)

... ... ... (a) ...

... ★ (c) ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ★ (k)

New Mexico .................. New York ...................... North Carolina ............. North Dakota ............... Ohio ..............................

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

... ... ... (n) ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ (e) ... ... ...

(l) ... ... ... ★ (e)

... ... ... ... ...

... ★(m) ★ ... ★

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ...

Oklahoma ..................... Oregon .......................... Pennsylvania ................ Rhode Island ................ South Carolina .............

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ Dec. 1 (e) ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ ...

... ★(a) ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ★

South Dakota ................ Tennessee ...................... Texas ............................. Utah .............................. Vermont ........................

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ... (q) ...

... ... 6th day ★(r) (k)

... ★(a)(e) ... ... ...

... ★(a)(e) ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ... ★ (t) ★ (s) ...

... ... ... ... ★

Virginia ......................... Washington ................... West Virginia ................ Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming ......................

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

Dec. 20 Dec. 20 (d) ... ... Dec. 1

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★(j) ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

(a) (i) ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ★

No. Mariana Islands .... Puerto Rico ................... U.S. Virgin Islands .......

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

(a) ... May 30

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ★ ★(o)

... ... ...

... ... ★

(j) ... ...

★ ★ (u)

State or other jurisdiction

Legal source of deadline Constitutional

Statutory

Prior to session

Alabama ....................... Alaska ........................... Arizona ......................... Arkansas ....................... California .....................

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... Dec. 15 ★ ★ ...

Colorado ....................... Connecticut .................. Delaware ....................... Florida .......................... Georgia .........................

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

Hawaii ........................... Idaho ............................. Illinois ........................... Indiana .......................... Iowa ..............................

... ... ... ... ...

Kansas .......................... Kentucky ...................... Louisiana ...................... Maine ............................ Maryland ......................

See footnotes at end of table.

164

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Within one week


STATE LEGISLATURES

LEGISLATIVE APPROPRIATIONS PROCESS: BUDGET DOCUMENTS AND BILLS — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003 and October 2004.Key: ★—Yes . . .—No (a) Specific time limitations: Alaska—4th legislative day; Connecticut—not later than the first session day following the third day in February, in each odd numbered year; Georgia—first five days of session; Iowa—no later than February 1; Kentucky—10th legislative day; Maine—by Friday following the first Monday in January; Nevada—no later than 14 days before commencement of regular session; New Hampshire—by February 15; Oregon—Dec. 15 in evennumbered years; Tennessee—on or before February 1; No. Mariana Islands— no later than 6 months before the beginning of the fiscal year. (b) Presented by November 1 to the Joint Budget Committee. (c) Executive budget bill is introduced and used as a working tool for committee. Nebraska—Governor must submit his/her budget by January 15th each biennium of odd numbered years. (d) For fiscal period other than biennium, 20 days prior to first day of session. (e) Later for first session of a new governor; Kansas—21 days; Maryland— 10 days after convening; Michigan—within 60 days; New Jersey—February 15; New York—February 1; Ohio—by March 15; Oregon—February 1; Tennessee—March 1. (f) The governor shall submit his executive budget to the Joint Legislative Committee on the budget no later than 45 days prior to each regular session; except that in the first year of each term, the executive budget shall be submitted no later than 30 days prior to the regular session. Copies shall be made available to the entire legislature on the first day of each regular session. (g) Bills appropriating monies for the general operating budget and ancillary

appropriations, bills appropriating funds for the expenses of the legislature and the judiciary must be submitted to the legislature for introduction no later than 45 days prior to each regular session, except that in the first year of each term, such appropriation bills shall be submitted no later than 30 days prior to the regular session. (h) Appropriations bill other than the budget bill (supplementary) may be introduced at any time. They must provide their own tax source and may not be enacted until the budget bill is enacted. (i) Even-numbered years. (j) Last Tuesday in January. A later submission date may be requested by the governor. (k) No official submission dates. Occurs by custom early in the session. (l) January 1. (m) Governor has 30 days to amend or supplement the budget; he may submit any amendments to any bills or submit supplemental bills. (n) For whole legislature. Legislative Council’s Budget Section receives budget during legislature’s December organizational session. (o) By enacting annual appropriations legislation. (p) No later than the 16th legislative day by rule. (q) Governor must submit budget to Legislative Fiscal Analyst 34 days before official submission to legislature. (r) Must submit to the legislature no later than 3 days after session begins. (s) Legislative rules require budget bills to be introduced by the 43rd day of the session, three days prior to the constitutionally mandated end of the session. (t) Within first 30 days of session. (u) Prior to September 30.

The Council of State Governments

165


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Table 3.18 FISCAL NOTES: CONTENT AND DISTRIBUTION Content

Distribution Legislators

State or other jurisdiction

Fiscal Intent or Projected Proposed impact purpose Cost future source of on local of bill involved cost revenue government Other

Appropriations committee Available on Bill Chair All request sponsor Members only

Executive Fiscal budget staff staff

Alabama ........................ Alaska ............................ Arizona .......................... Arkansas (f) .................. California ......................

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ (a) ... ★ ★ ...

... (d) ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ... ★

Colorado ....................... Connecticut ................... Delaware ....................... Florida ........................... Georgia ..........................

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ (i) ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

... ... ★ ... ...

Hawaii ........................... Idaho .............................. Illinois ............................ Indiana .......................... Iowa ............................... Kansas ...........................

... ★ ... ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

Kentucky ....................... Louisiana ...................... Maine ............................. Maryland ......................

★ ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★

... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ (y)

★ ... ★ ...

... ★ (o) ... ...

★ ... ★ ...

... ... ★ ...

Massachusetts .............. Michigan ....................... Minnesota ..................... Mississippi .................... Missouri ........................

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ (q) ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ (r) ★ ... ...

★ ★ (s) ★ ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ★ (y) ★

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ... ★ ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ★

Montana ........................ Nebraska ....................... Nevada ........................... New Hampshire ............ New Jersey ....................

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (k) ... ★ ★ ★ (r)

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

New Mexico .................. New York ....................... North Carolina ............. North Dakota (w) ......... Ohio ...............................

★ ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ (x) ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

(t) ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ (n) ★ ★ (n) ...

... ... (c) ... (aa)

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

(v) ★ ... ★ (z) ...

(v) ... ... ★ ...

Oklahoma ..................... Oregon ........................... Pennsylvania ................ Rhode Island ................ South Carolina .............

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ (e) ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★ (j)

★ ... ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ... ...

South Dakota ................ Tennessee ...................... Texas .............................. Utah ............................... Vermont ........................

... ★ ... ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (g) ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (u) …………………………..(h)…………………...........

... ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ...

Virginia ......................... Washington ................... West Virginia ................ Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming .......................

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ★ (dd)

★ ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ (m) ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

... ★ (cc) ... ★ ...

... ... ... ★ ...

No. Mariana Islands .... Puerto Rico ................... U.S. Virgin Islands .......

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ... ... ... ★ ★ ★ …………………......................................................(p)…………...............................................................………........... ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ ...

See footnotes at end of table.

166

The Book of the States 2005

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (bb) ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ... ... ... ... ... ★ (l) ★ (l) ... ... ... ... ... ★ ... ... ... ... ★ ★ .....………………………...(b)………………………….... ★ ★ ... ★ (m) ★ ★ ...


STATE LEGISLATURES

FISCAL NOTES: CONTENT AND DISTRIBUTION — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003 and October 2004. Note: A fiscal note is a summary of the fiscal effects of a bill on government revenues, expenditures and liabilities. Key: ★— Yes . . .—No (a) Fiscal notes are included in bills for final passage calendar. (b) Fiscal notes are available to everyone. (c) Fiscal notes are posted on the internet and available to all members. (d) Fiscal notes are available online to anyone who wishes to review them. Formal copies go to the bill sponsor and each committee to which the bill is referred. A bill cannot be passed from committee without a fiscal note. (e) Assumptions (methodology/explanation of fiscal figures). (f) Only retirement, corrections and local government bills require fiscal notes. (g) Equalized education funding impact statement and criminal justice policy impact statement. (h) Fiscal notes are not mandatory and their content will vary. (i) The fiscal notes are printed with the bills favorably reported by the committees. (j) Fiscal impact statements on proposed legislation are prepared by the Office of State Budget and sent to the House or Senate standing committee that requested the impact. All fiscal impacts are posted on the OSB web page. (k) Mechanical defects in bill. (l) A summary of the fiscal note is attached to the summary of the relevant bill in the Legislative Synopsis and Digest. Fiscal notes are prepared for the sponsor of the bill and are attached to the bill on file in either the office of the Clerk of the House or the Secretary of the Senate. (m) Or to the committee to which referred. (n) Bill impacting workers compensation benefits or premiums must have actuarial impact statement. Bills proposing changes in states and local government retirement system also must have an actuarial note.

(o) Prepared by the Legislative Fiscal Office when a state agency is involved and prepared by Legislative Auditor’s office when a local board or commission is involved; copies sent to House and Senate staff offices respectively. (p) The Legislature of Puerto Rico does not prepare fiscal notes, but upon request the economics unit could prepare one. The Department of Treasury has the duty to analyze and prepare fiscal notes. (q) Fiscal notes are prepared only if cost exceeds $100,000 or matter has not been acted upon by the Joint Committee on Ways and Means. (r) Other relevant data. (s) Analyses prepared by the Senate Fiscal Agency are distributed to Senate members only; Fiscal notes prepared by the House Fiscal Agency are prepared for bills being voted on in any standing committee and are distributed to the chairperson and all committee members. (t) Occasionally. (u) Fiscal notes are to include cost estimates on all proposed bills that anticipate direct expenditures by any Utah resident and the cost to the overall Utah resident population. (v) Fiscal impact statements prepared by Legislative Finance Committee staff are available to anyone on request and on the legislature’s web site. (w) Notes required only if impact is $5,000 or more. (x) A four-year projection. (y) And to the committee to which referred. (z) Only select fiscal staff. (aa) Fiscal notes are prepared for bills before being voted on in any standing committee or floor session. Upon distribution to the legislators preparing to vote, the fiscal notes are made available to all other legislators and interested parties. (bb) The Dept. of Planning and Budget and other relevant state agencies, including the Dept. of Taxation , prepare impact statements, The Joint Legislative Audit And Review Commission (JLARC) prepares review statements as requested by committee chairpersons. (cc) Distributed to appropriate fiscal and policy staff. (dd) Fiscal notes are included with the bill upon introduction.

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Table 3.19 BILL AND RESOLUTION INTRODUCTIONS AND ENACTMENTS: 2004 REGULAR SESSIONS Introductions State

Duration of session**

Enactments Resolutions

Measures vetoed by governor

Bills

Resolutions

Bills 311 181 343

330 37 11

5 (a) 0 10 (c)

950

247

20

Length of session

Alabama ........................... Alaska ............................... Arizona ............................. Arkansas .......................... California .........................

Feb. 3–May 17, 2004 Jan. 12–May 12, 2004 Jan. 12–May 26, 2004 No regular session in 2004 Jan. 5–Nov. 30, 2004

1,397 391 1,127

937 79 100

2,169

259

Colorado .......................... Connecticut ...................... Delaware .......................... Florida .............................. Georgia .............................

Jan. 7–May 5, 2004 Feb. 4–May 5, 2004 Jan. 13–June 30, 2004 Mar. 2–April 30, 2004 Jan. 12–April 7, 2004

726 1,324 411 2,691 1,031

44 (d) 250 93 262 (f) 1,735

424 267 218 494 394

2 154 19 3 (h) 1,549

9 (c) 1 1 22 19

120C 92C 43L 60C 40C

Hawaii .............................. Idaho ................................. Illinois ............................... Indiana .............................

2,537 619 4,637

844 76 1,199

274 395 412

289 47 1045

37 (a) 6 32 (a)

60L 69C (b)

Iowa ..................................

Jan. 21–May 6, 2004 Jan. 12–Mar. 20, 2004 Jan. 6–July 24, 2004 (m) Nov. 18–Dec. 5, 2003; Jan. 6–Dec. 12, 2004 Jan. 12–Apr. 20, 2004

973 890

253 212

98 177

200 3

0 (a) 29

29L 100C

Kansas .............................. Kentucky .......................... Louisiana ......................... Maine ................................ Maryland .........................

Jan. 12–May 27, 2004 Jan. 6–Apr. 13, 2004 Mar. 29–June 21, 2004 Jan. 7–Jan. 30, 2004 Jan. 14–Apr. 12, 2004

755 999 2,604 202 2,482

49 558 863 15 21

185 165 931 7 557

1 32 779 0 1

24 (c) 2 12 0 154 (a)

90L 60L 60L 12L 90C

Massachusetts ................. Michigan .......................... Minnesota ........................ Mississippi ....................... Missouri ...........................

Jan. 3, 2003–July 30, 2004 Jan. 14, 2004–Dec. 29, 2004 Jan. 2–May 16, 2004 N.A. Jan. 7–May 30, 2004

7,718 1,545 3,051 N.A. 1,653

N.A. 16 (d) 146 N.A. 60

680 596 159 N.A. 210

N.A. 0 29 N.A. 1

(r) 55 6 N.A. 8

N.A. (b) (b) N.A. N.A.

Montana ........................... Nebraska .......................... Nevada .............................. New Hampshire ............... New Jersey .......................

No regular session in 2004 Jan. 7–Apr. 15, 2004 446 No regular session in 2004 Jan. 7–June 17, 2004 713 (p) Jan. 13, 2004–Jan. 10, 2006 (q) 5,577

132

3

2

60L

260 186

15 65

4 3

17L N.A.

New Mexico ..................... New York .......................... North Carolina ................ North Dakota .................. Ohio ..................................

Jan. 20–Feb. 19, 2004 Jan. 7, 2004–Jan. 5, 2005 May 10–June 18, 2004 No regular session in 2004 Jan. 5–Dec. 29, 2004 (g)(k)

Oklahoma ........................ Oregon .............................. Pennsylvania ................... Rhode Island ................... South Carolina ................

Feb. 2–May 28, 2004 No regular session in 2004 Jan. 6–Nov. 30, 2004 Jan. 6–July 30, 2004 Jan. 13–June 3, 2004

South Dakota ................... Tennessee ......................... Texas ................................. Utah .................................. Vermont ........................... Virginia ............................ Washington ...................... West Virginia ................... Wisconsin ......................... Wyoming ..........................

36 (p) 838

6 4,945 13 (d)

34 (i) 32 (d)

140 729 (e) 203

341

37 (d)

132

20 (d)

0

(b)

1,698

67 (o)

557

7 (o)

10

70L

1267 N.A. 714 (n)

239 662 255 (l)

Jan. 13–Mar. 15, 2004 Jan. 13–May 21, 2004 No regular session in 2004 Jan. 19–Mar. 3, 2004 Jan. 8–May 30, 2003; Jan. 6–May 20, 2004 (j)

530 2,969

8 1,618

311 616

1 1,495

602 1,100

71 618

375 188

43 554

Jan. 14–Mar. 16, 2004 Jan. 12–Mar. 11, 2004 N.A. Jan. 20, 2004–Jan. 3, 2005 Feb. 9–Mar. 5, 2004

2,181 1,567 N.A. 1,524 310

825 80 N.A. 0 16

1,028 281 N.A. 116 133

2 11 N.A. 0 3

The Book of the States 2005

647 407 680 (n)

14 78 (e) 1

(b)

1,174 17,214 (e) 850

4,292 2,955 844 (l)

See footnotes at end of table.

168

10

30L 122C 136C

11 30 (a) 18 (a) 5 0 6 (a) 3 7 4 N.A. 40 1

30C 365C 44L

N.A. (b) 63L 35L (b) 45C 160C 45L 60C N.A. (b) 20L


STATE LEGISLATURES

INTRODUCTIONS AND ENACTMENTS: REGULAR SESSIONS — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey of legislative agencies, January 2005. **Actual adjourment dates are listed regardless of constitutional or statutory limitations. For more information on provisions, see Table 3.2, Legislative Sessions: Legal Provisions. Key: C—Calendar day. L—Legislative day (in some states, called a session or workday; definition may vary slightly; however, it general refers to any day on which either chamber of the legislature is in session.) N.A.—Not available. (a) Number of vetoes overridden: Alabama-3; Hawaii-7; Illinois-9; Indiana -3; Maryland-5; Rhode Island-9; South Carolina-16; Utah-2. (b) Length of session: California—Senate 59L and House 62L; Illinois— Senate 85L (15 were perfunctory) and House 94L (34 were perfunctory); Michigan—Senate 109L and House 93L; Minnesota—Senate 51L and House 52L; Ohio—Senate 116L and House 122L; Rhode Island—Senate 63L and House 70L; Tennessee—Senate 45L and House 47L; Wisconsin—Senate 89L and Assembly 82L. (c) Line item or partial vetoes. Arizona—includes two line item vetoes; Colorado—includes three partially vetoed measures; Kansas—includes 16 line item vetoes.

(d) Numbers include concurrent and joint resolutions only. For Colorado, numbers only include concurrent resolutions. For Michigan and North Carolina, numbers only include joint resolutions. (e) At the time this information was received, there were still 31 30-day bills pending. (f) Includes one-chamber resolutions. (g) Senate: Dec. 8, 2004 and House: Dec. 29, 2004 (h) Does not include one-chamber resolutions. (i) There are no official statistics for resolution introductions. (j) Two-year session. (k) The second session of the 125th General Assembly. (l) Numbers includes joint resolutions. (m) House convened on Jan. 6 and Senate convened on Jan. 14. (n) Numbers include Senate, House and concurrent resolutions. (o) Joint resolutions. Does not include simple and concurrent resolutions. (p) For bills, number includes 188 retained from 2003 session. For resolutions, number includes eight retained from 2003 session. (q) New Jersey has a two-year legislative session. Information reflects 2004 numbers. (r) Total number of vetoes unavailable, however there were 21 non-budget vetoes overridden by the governor in 2003 and 2004.

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STATE LEGISLATURES

Table 3.20 BILL AND RESOLUTION INTRODUCTIONS AND ENACTMENTS: 2004 SPECIAL SESSIONS Introductions State

Enactments

Bills

Alabama ......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ........................... Arkansas ........................ California .......................

Nov. 8–Nov. 16, 2004 June 22–June 24, 2004 No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 Nov. 18, 2003–Nov. 30, 2004 Jan. 18–Nov. 30, 2004 (g)

69 10

69 4

19 1

41 1

0 0

5L 3C

21 18

7 2

1 1

2 0

0 0

(f) 61L

Colorado ........................ Connecticut ....................

0 0 0 5

6 6 1 5

0 0 0 5

6 6 1 5

0 0 0 0

1L 1C N.A. 2L

Delaware ........................ Florida ............................ Georgia ...........................

No special session in 2004 Jan. 26, 2004 (c) Jan. 26, 2004 (c) May 11, 2004 (d) May 11–June 28, 2004 No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 May 3–May 7, 2004

7

147

4

146

0

5L

Hawaii ............................ Idaho ............................... Illinois ............................. Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................

No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 June 24–July 24, 2004 No special session in 2004 Sept. 7, 2004

9

91

0

85

0

(e)

4

3

2

1

0

1C

Kansas ............................ Kentucky ........................ Louisiana ....................... Maine .............................. Maryland .......................

No special session in 2004 Oct. 5–Oct. 19, 2004 Mar. 7–Mar. 17, 2004 Feb. 3–Apr. 30, 2004 Dec. 28, 2004–Jan. 11, 2005

11 62 124 4

72 63 26 1

1 14 265 8

0 59 0 0

0 0 2 1 (q)

11L 11C 38L 15C

Massachusetts ............... Michigan ........................ Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 N.A. No special session in 2004

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

Montana ......................... Nebraska ........................ Nevada ............................ New Hampshire ............. New Jersey .....................

No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 Nov. 10–Dec. 4, 2004 No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004

1

151

15

0

25C

New Mexico ................... New York ........................ North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ................................

No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 Nov. 4, 2004 No special session in 2004 Dec. 13–Dec. 29, 2004 (b)

3

0

1L

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ............................ Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

May 19–Sept. 27, 2004 No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas ............................... Utah ................................

No special session in 2004 No special session in 2004 Apr. 20–May 17, 2004 June 28, 2004 Sept. 15, 2004 June 16, 2004

Virginia .......................... Washington .................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ....................... Wyoming ........................

Mar. 17–May 7, 2004 July 13, 2004 No special session in 2004 N.A. No special session in 2004 July 12–July 17, 2004

See footnotes at end of table.

170

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1 (a)

Bills

1

Resolutions

Length of session

Duration of session**

Vermont .........................

Resolutions

Measures vetoed by governor

1 (a)

4

0

1

0

0

(b)

0

6

0

6

0

3C

601 (i) 0 0 0

0 1 4 0

551 (i) 0 0 0

0 0 0 0

8L 1C 1C 1L

104 1 4 0 29 2

74 6

4 1

0 0

0 0

N.A. N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

11

4

5

1

0

6L


STATE LEGISLATURES

INTRODUCTIONS AND ENACTMENTS: SPECIAL SESSIONS — Continued

Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey of state legislative agencies, January 2005. ** Actual adjournment dates are listed regardless of constitutional or statutory limitations. For more information on provisions, see Table 3.2, Legislative Sessions: Legal Provisions. Key: N.A.—Not available C—Calendar day. L—Legislative day (in some states, called a session or workday; definition may vary slightly; however, it generally refers to any day on which either chamber of the legislature is in session). (a) Joint resolutions only.

(b) The Senate adjourned on Dec. 29, 2004, however the House adjourned on Dec. 17, 2004. Length of session: Senate—8L and House—4L. (c) Continuation of 2003 session. (d) House has not adjourned sine die. (e) Senate—22L and House—17L. (f) Length of session: Senate—41L and Assembly 49L. (g) Session for Senate only. (h) Number of vetoes overridden: 8. (i) Resolution introductions include: 33 concurrent resolutions, 24 joint resolutions, 544 resolutions. Resolution enactments include: 18 concurrent resolutions and 533 resolutions.

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Table 3.21 STAFF FOR INDIVIDUAL LEGISLATORS Senate State or other jurisdiction

House/Assembly

Capitol Personal

Capitol Shared

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

YR ... YR ... SO

... SO/1.2, YR/2 YR/1 (f) YR ...

... ... YR (g) ... ...

YR ... YR ... SO

... SO/.86, YR/3 YR/2 (f) YR ...

... ... YR (g) ... ...

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

SO ... (i) YR/24, SO/8 YR, SO (t)

... YR (h) YR (j) ... ...

... ... YR (i) ... YR

... ... (i) ... YR (t)

SO/3 YR (h) YR (j) (l) SO (t)

... ... YR (i) ... YR

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

YR ... YR ... YR

... YR ... YR YR

... ... ... ... ...

YR YR YR ... YR

... ... ... YR YR

... ... ... ... ...

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

... YR (m) SO (c) ... YR (e)

SO ... YR SO ...

... ... ... ... (e)

... SO ... --------------------Unicameral-------------------SO (c) YR ... ... YR ... YR (e) ... ...

New Mexico (k) .................. New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

SO YR YR (w) ... YR

... ... YR SO (c) YR

... YR ... ... ...

... YR YR (w) ... YR

SO YR YR SO (c) YR

... ... ... ... ...

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

YR YR YR ... ...

... ... ... YR/8 ...

... ... YR ... ...

... YR YR ... YR

YR ... ... YR/7 ...

... YR YR ... ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

... YR YR (o) YR/1 (n)

SO ... ... SO ...

... ... YR ... ...

... YR YR (o) YR/1 (n)

SO ... ... SO ...

... YR YR ... ...

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

SO (e) YR (p) SO YR (r) ...

... ... ... YR (r) ...

(e) (q) ... (r) ...

SO (e) YR ... YR ...

SO/2 ... SO/17 YR (r) ...

(q) ... ... (r) ...

No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

YR (s) YR (s) YR (s)

(s) ... ...

...

YR (s) (s) (r) YR (s) ... ... --------------------Unicameral--------------------

The Book of the States 2005

YR/10 ... YR (a) YR ...

District

YR/5, SO/35 YR/5, SO/2 ... YR/5, SO/65 YR/2, SO/2 ... YR/36 ... ... ... YR/38 ... --------------------------------------------------(v)-------------------------------------------------YR (e) ... YR (e) YR (e) ... YR (e) ... YR/3, SO/68 ... ... YR/25, SO/113 ...

...

... SO ... ... YR

Shared

Colorado (b) ....................... Connecticut (d) .................. Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

172

(u) YR ... ... YR

Personal

... SO YR ... YR

See footnotes at end of table.

YR/2 ... ... YR ...

District

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

(u) YR ... ... YR


STATE LEGISLATURES

STAFF FOR INDIVIDUAL LEGISLATORS — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003 and October 2004. Note: For entries under column heading “Shared,” figures after slash indicated approximate number of legislators per staff person, where available. Key: . . . — Staff not provided for individual legislators. YR — Year-round. SO — Session only. IO — Interim only. (a) Representatives share a secretary with another legislator, however House leadership and committee chairs usually have their own secretarial staff. All legislators share professional research staff within their house. (b) The number of year round staff is comprised of leadership staff and caucus staff. Each caucus may also hire additional shared staff during the session. During the session, each legislator can hire an aide for a limited number of hours. (c) Secretarial staff; in North Dakota, leadership only. (d) The numbers are for staff assinged to specific legislators. There is additional staff working in the leadership offices that also suport the rank and file members. (e) Personal and district staff are the same. In Florida, two out of the three district employees may travel to the capitol for sessions. (f) Partisan offices provide staff year-round. (g) District office expenses allocated per year from which staff may be hired. (h) Leadership offices provide staff support year-round. Individual legislators have access to clerical support year-round, augmented during a session. (i) Each legislator may hire as many assistants as desired, but pay from

public funds ranges from $2,000 to $3,000 per month per legislator. Assistant(s) generally work in the district office but may also work at the capitol during the session. (j) The six caucuses are assigned one full-time position each (potentially 24 legislators per one staff person). (k) Speaker, pro tem and leadership have staff year round. (l) The House members do not have individual staff. There are 20 people who work year round in the three partisan offices, 12 of whom are legislative aides who primarily work directly with legislators. (m) Senators offices have 2 year round staff members. Committee chair offices have 3-4 staff members year round. (n) No personal staff except one administrative assistant for the Speaker and one for the Sneate Pro Tempore. (o) Legislators are provided student interns during session. (p) Leadership, caucus chair, and Ways and Means Committee chair have two full-time staff each. All other legislators have one full-time staff year round and one additional staff session only. (q) Full-time staff may move to the district office during interim period. (r) Some of personal staff may work in the district office. Total of all staff salaries for each senator must be within limits established by the Senate. (s) Individual staffing and staff pool arrangements are at the discretion of the individual legislator. (t) Senators have one year round administrative aide and one session only secretary. Delegates have one part-time year round administrative aide and a shared session only secretary. (u) Six counties have local delegation offices with shared staff. (v) Staffers are a combination of full time, part time, shared, personal, etc. andtheir assignments change throughout the year. (w) Part time during interim.

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Table 3.22 STAFF FOR LEGISLATIVE STANDING COMMITTEES Source of staff services** Committee staff assistance State or other jurisdiction Alabama ......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ........................... Arkansas ........................ California .......................

Senate Prof. ●

★ ★ ★ ★

Cler. ★

House/Assembly Prof. ●

Cler.

Chamber agency (b)

Cler.

★ ★ ★

B B ... B B

B ... ... ... B

B ... B ... B

... B B ... B

... B ... ... B

B ... B ... B

B ... B ... B

... ★ ... ★ ★

B B B B B

... ... B B B

B ... ... S, H B

B ... ... S, H B

B ... ... S, H B

B B ... S, H B

... ... ... S, H B

... B ... S, H ...

B B ... ... B

B B ... ... ...

B ... B ... B (d)

B ... B ... ...

B ... B ... B

B ... B ... ...

B B ... B B

B B ... B ...

... ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

Cler.

Prof.

Cler.

Committee or committee chair

Prof.

★ ★ ★ ★

Prof.

Caucus or leadership

B B B B B

★ ★ ★

Joint central agency (a)

Prof.

Cler.

Colorado ........................ Connecticut .................... Delaware ........................ Florida ............................ Georgia ...........................

★ ... ... ★

Hawaii ............................ Idaho ............................... Illinois ............................. Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................

★ ★ ★ ... ...

Kansas ............................ Kentucky ........................ Louisiana ....................... Maine .............................. Maryland .......................

★ ★ ★ (m) ★ (c) ★ (h)

★ ★ ★ ★ (c) ★ (h)

★ ★ ★ (m) ★ (c) ★ (h)

★ ★ ★ ★ (c) ★ (h)

B B B B B

B (e) B B B B

... ... B S, H ...

... ... B S, H ...

... ... B S, H ...

... ... B S, H ...

... ... B (g) ... ...

... ... B (g) B ...

Massachusetts ............... Michigan ........................ Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... B ... ... B

... ... ... ... ...

... ... B B B, S, H

... H ... B ...

... B H ... S

... ... H ... S

... B B B S, H

... S B B ...

★ U ★ ★ ★

★ U ★ (h) ★ ★

B ... B B B

... ... ... ... B

... ... ... S, H ...

B ... B S, H ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★

Montana ......................... Nebraska ........................ Nevada ............................ New Hampshire ............. New Jersey .....................

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ (h) ★ ★

New Mexico ................... New York ........................ North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ................................

★ ★ ★ ●(f) ★

★ ★ ★ (i) ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ●(f) ★

★ ★ ★ (i) ★ ★

... B B B B

... B ... ... ...

B (g) B ... ... ...

B (g) B ... B ...

... B ... ... ...

... B ... ... ...

... B ... ... B

... B B (i) ... B

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ............................ Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... B B B B

... B B B B

B ... B ... B

B ... B ... B

... ... B B B

... ... B B B

... B B ... B

... B B ... B

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas ............................... Utah ................................ Vermont .........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

B (h) B B B B

... ... B ... B

... ... ... ... ...

... B (j) B B ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... S B ... ...

... B B ... ...

Virginia .......................... Washington .................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ....................... Wyoming ........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

B ... B B B

... ... B ... ...

B ... B B ...

B ... B ... B

... B B ... ...

... B B ... B

(g) B (k) B B ...

(g) B (k) B B B

No. Mariana Islands ..... Puerto Rico .................... U.S. Virgin Islands ........

★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★

★ ★ U

★ ★ U

B (l) B (l) S (l)

B (p) B (l) S (l)

(l) B (l) S (l)

B (l) B (l) S (l)

B (l) B (l) S (l)

See footnotes at end of table.

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B (l) B (l) S (l)

B (l) B (l) S (l)

B (l) B (l) S (l)


STATE LEGISLATURES

STAFF FOR LEGISLATIVE STANDING COMMITTEES — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003.and October 2004. ** — Multiple entries reflect a combination of organizations and location of services. Key: ★ — All committees ● — Some committees . . . — Services not provided B — Both chambers H — House S — Senate U — Unicameral (a) Includes legislative council or service agency or central management agency. (b) Includes chamber management agency, office of clerk or secretary and House or Senate research office. (c) Standing committees are joint House and Senate committees. (d) The Senate secretary and House clerk maintain supervision of committee clerks. During the session each committee selects its own clerk.

(e) Senators select their secretaries and notify the central administrative services agency; all administrative employee matters handled by the agency. (f) House and Senate Appropriations Committees have Legislative Council fiscal staff at their hearings. (g) Staff is assigned to each committee but work under the direction of the chair. (h) Committees hire additional staff on a contractual basis during session only under direction of chair. (i) Member’s personal secretary serves as a clerk to the committee or subcommittee that the member chairs. (j) Bill clerks during session only. (k) Each chamber has a non-partisan research staff which provides support services to committees (including chair). (l) In general, the legislative service agency provides legal and staff assistance for legislative meetings and provides associated materials. Individual legislators hire personal or committee staff as their budgets provide and at their own discretion. (m) House Appropriations and Senate Finance Committees have Legislative Fiscal Office staff at their hearings.

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Table 3.23 STANDING COMMITTEES: APPOINTMENT AND NUMBER Committee members appointed by:

State or other jurisdiction

Senate

House

Committee chairpersons appointed by: Senate

House

Number of standing committees during regular 2004 session (a) Senate

House

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

CC CC P (bb) CR

S CC S (d) S

CC CC P (bb) CR

S CC S S S

24 9 13 10 23

24 9 18 10 29

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

MjL, MnL PT PT P CC

S, MnL S S S S

MjL PT PT P CC

S S S S S

10 (a) (e) 26 24 25

11 (a) (e) 27 18 34

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

P (f) PT (h) P, MnL PT MjL, MnL (i)

(g) S S, MnL S S

P (f) PT P PT MjL (i)

(g) S S S S

15 10 21 19 16

19 14 37 20 17

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

(j) CC P P P

S CC S (k) S S

(j) CC P P P

S CC S S S

14 14 17 4 (e) 8

21 19 17 6 (e) 9

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

P MjL CR P PT (l)

S, MnL S S S S

P MjL MjL P PT

S S S S S

4(e) 21 (c) 14 39 (c) 35

8 (e) 22 (c) 26 45 (c) 35

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

CC CC MjL (m) P (n) P

S U S (m) S (o) S

CC E MjL (m) P (n) P

S U S (m) S S

17 14 9 16 15 (c)

17 U 10 21 24 (c)

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

CC PT (p) PT CC P (q)

S S S CC S (q)

CC PT (p) PT MjL P (q)

S S S MjL S (q)

9 (aa) 33 20 (z) 11 14

14 (aa) 37 31 (z) 12 19

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

PT, MnL P PT P E

S S S S S

PT P PT P E

S S S S E

18 9 (cc) 22 11 15

24 15 (cc) 26 10 11

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

PT, MnL S P P CC

S S S (r) S S

PT S P P CC

S S S S S

14 14 15 11 11

14 15 42 15 14

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

E P (b)(t) P (w) P (x)

S S (u) S S S (x)

(s) CC P (w) P (x)

S S (v) S S S (x)

11 15 18 14 (c) 12

14 21 15 45 (c) 12

Dist. of Columbia ............... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

(y) P P P

U S S U

(y) P P P

U S S U

9 8 22 9

U 7 32 U

See footnotes at end of table.

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STATE LEGISLATURES

STANDING COMMITTEES: APPOINTMENT AND NUMBER — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2004 and March 2005. Key: CC — Committee on Committees CR — Committee on Rules E — Election MjL — Majority Leader . MnL — Minority Leader P — President PT — President pro tempore S — Speaker U — Unicameral Legislature (a) Includes appropriations committee. (b) Lieutenant governor is president of the senate. (c) Also, joint standing committees. Colorado, 12; Michigan, 5; New Jersey, 4; Wisconsin, 9. (d) Members of the standing committees shall be selected by House District Caucuses with each caucus selecting five members for each “A” standing committee and five members for each “B” standing committee. (e) Substantive standing committees are joint committees. Connecticut, 18 (there are also three statutory and three select committees); Maine, 17 (also joint committee on rules and special committee on health care); Massachusetts, 26. (f) President appoints committee members and chairs; minority members on committees are nominated by minority party caucus. (g) By resolution, with members of majority party designating the chair, vice-chairs and majority party members of committees, and members of minority party designating minority party members. (h) Committee members appointed by the senate leadership under the direction of the president pro tempore, by and with the senate’s advice. (i) Appointments made after consultation with the president.

(j) Committee on Organization, Calendar and Rules. (k) Speaker appoints only 12 of the 19 members of the Committee on Appropriations. (l) Senate minority committee members chosen by minority caucus, but appointed by president pro tempore. (m) Committee composition and leadership usually determined by party caucus, with final decision by leader. (n) Appointments made after consultation with the minority leader. (o) Speaker appoints minority members with advice of the minority floor leader. (p) President pro tempore is also majority leader. (q) The minority leader may recommend for consideration minority party members for each committee. (r) For each standing substantive committee of the house, except for the appropriations committee, a maximum of one-half of the membership, exclusive of chair and vice-chair, is determined by seniority; the remaining membership of the committee is determined by the speaker. (s) Senior members of the majority part on the committee is the chair. (t) Confirmed by the senate. (u) By each party caucus. (v) By majority caucus. . (w) Majority leader as chairperson, Organization Committee. (x) With the advice and consent of the Rules and Procedures Committee. (y) Chair of the Council. (z) Does not include select or subcommittees. (aa) Senate: Includes eight substantive committees and one procedural committee. House: Includes 12 substantive committees and three procedural committees. (bb) Selection process based on seniority. (cc) Senate includes eight substantive committees and one procedural committee. House includes 12 substantive committees and three procedural committees.

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Table 3.24 RULES ADOPTION AND STANDING COMMITTEES: PROCEDURE State or other jurisdiction

Constitution permits Committee meetings each legislative open to public* body to determine House/ its own rules Senate Assembly

Alabama .........................

Alaska .............................

...

Arizona ...........................

Arkansas ........................

California .......................

Colorado ........................

Connecticut ....................

Delaware ........................

Florida ............................

Georgia ...........................

Hawaii ............................

★ (a)

Idaho ...............................

★ (a)

Illinois .............................

★ (a)

Indiana ...........................

Iowa ................................

Kansas ............................

Kentucky ........................

Louisiana .......................

★ (a)

See footnotes at end of table.

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Specific, advance notice provisions for committee meetings or hearings

Senate: 4 hours, if possible House: 24 hours, except Rules & Local Legislations committees For meetings, by 4:00 p.m. on the preceding Thurs.; for first hearings on bills, 5 days Senate: agenda submitted to secretary 5 days prior to meeting House: agenda distributed Wed. prior to Mon. meeting and Thurs. prior to all other meetings. Senate: 2 days House: 24 hours

Voting/roll call provisions to report a bill to floor Senate: final vote on a bill is recorded. House: recorded vote if requested by member of committee and sustained by one additional committee member. Roll call vote on any measure taken upon request by any member of either house. Senate: roll call vote taken upon request. House: roll call vote required for final action on any bill.

Senate: roll call votes are recorded. House: report of committee recommendation signed by committee chair. ★ Senate: none Senate: roll call. House: none House: roll call. ★ Senate: final action on a measure Senate: final action by recorded roll call vote. is prohibited unless notice is House: final action by recorded roll call vote. posted one calendar day prior to its consideration (f) House: none ★ Senate: one day notice for Senate: roll call required. meetings, five days notice for House: roll call required. hearings. House: one day notice for meetings, five days notice for hearings. ★ Senate: agenda released the day Senate: results of any committee vote are recorded. before meetings House: results of any committee vote are recorded. House: agenda for meetings released on last legislative day of preceding week ★ Senate: during session–3 hours Senate: vote on final passage is recorded. notice for first 50 days, 4 hours House: vote on final passage is recorded. thereafter House: two days. ★ Senate: a list of committee Senate: recorded roll call taken if one-third members meetings shall be posted by sustain the call for yeas and nays. 10:00 a.m. the preceding Friday House: recorded roll call taken if one-fifth members House: none sustain the call for yeas and nays. ★ (a) Senate: 72 hours before Senate: final vote is recorded. 1st referral committee House: a record is made of a committee quorum and meetings, 48 hours before votes to report a bill out. subsequent referral committee meetings House: 48 hours ★ (a) Senate: none Senate: bills can be voted out by voice vote or roll call. House: none House: bills can be voted out by voice vote or roll call. ★ (a) Senate: 6 days Senate: votes on all legislative measures acted upon House: 6 days are recorded. House: votes on all legislative matters acted upon are recorded. ★ Senate: 48 hours Senate: majority of quorum; vote can be by roll call or House: prior to adjournment or the consent. meeting day next preceding the House: majority of quorum; vote can be by roll call or meeting or announced during session consent. ★ Senate: none Senate: final action by roll call. House: none House: committee reports include roll call on final disposition. ★ Senate: none Senate: vote recorded upon request of member. House: none House: he total for and against actions recorded. ★ Senate: none Senate: each member’s vote recorded on each bill. House: none House: each member’s vote recorded on each bill. ★ (a) Senate: no later than 1:00 p.m. Senate: any motion to report an instrument is decided the preceding day by a roll call vote. House: no later than 4:00 p.m. House: any motion to report an instrument is decided the preceding day by a roll call vote.


STATE LEGISLATURES

RULES ADOPTION AND STANDING COMMITTEES: PROCEDURE — Continued

State or other jurisdiction

Constitution permits each legislative body to determine its own rules

Committee meetings open to public* House/ Senate Assembly

Maine ..............................

Maryland .......................

Massachusetts ...............

Michigan ........................

Minnesota ......................

Mississippi .....................

Missouri .........................

Montana .........................

Nebraska ........................

Nevada ............................

New Hampshire .............

New Jersey .....................

New Mexico ...................

New York ........................

(b)

★ (a)

North Carolina ..............

(c)

North Dakota ................

Ohio ................................

Oklahoma ......................

Specific, advance notice provisions for committee meetings or hearings

Voting/roll call provisions to report a bill to floor

Senate: must be advertised two weekends in advance. House: must be advertised two weekends in advance. Senate: none House: none Senate: 48 hours for public hearings House: 48 hours for public hearings

Senate: recorded vote is required to report a bill out of committee. House: recorded vote is required to report a bill out of committee. ★ Senate: the final vote on any bill is recorded. House: the final vote on any bill is recorded. ★ Senate: voice vote or recorded roll call vote at the request of 2 committee members. House: recorded vote upon request by a member. ★ Senate: none Senate: committee reports include the vote of each House: none member on any bill. House: the daily journal reports the roll call on all motions to report bills. ★ Senate: 3 days Senate: recorded vote upon request of one member. House: 3 days Upon the request of 3 members, the record of a roll call vote and committee report are printed in the journal. House: recorded roll call vote upon request by a member. ★ Senate: none Senate: bills are reported out by voice vote or recorded House: none roll call vote. House: bills are reported out by voice vote or recorded roll call vote. ★ Senate: 24 hours Senate: yeas and nays are reported in journal. House: 24 hours House: bills are reported out by a recorded roll call vote. ★ Senate: 3 legislative days Senate: every vote of each member is recorded and made House: none public. House: every vote of each member is recorded and made public. U Seven calendar days notice In executive session, majority of the committee must before hearing a bill. vote in favor of the motion made. ★ Senate: by rule—adequate notice Senate: recorded vote is taken upon final committee House: by rule—adequate notice action on bills. House: recorded vote is taken upon final committee action on bills. ★ Senate: 5 days Senate: committees may report a bill out by voice or House: 4 days recorded roll call vote. House: committees may report a bill out by voice or recorded roll call vote. ★ (a) Senate: 5 days Senate: the chair reports the vote of each member House: 5 days present on a motion to report a bill. House: the chair reports the vote of each member present on motions with respect to bills. ★ Senate: none Senate: vote on the final report of the committee House: none taken by yeas and nays. Roll call vote upon request. House: vote on the final report of the committee taken by yeas and nays. Roll call vote upon request. ★ (a) Senate: 1 week Senate: each report records the vote of each Senator. Voting may be by proxy House: 1 week House: at the conclusion of a committee meeting a roll call vote is taken on each of the bills considered. No proxy votes allowed. ★ Senate: none (g) Senate: no roll call vote may be taken in any committee. House: none (g) House: roll call vote taken on any question when requested by member & sustained by one-fifth of members present. ★ Senate: notice posted the Senate: minutes include recorded roll call vote on each preceding Wed. or Thurs., bill referred out. depending on the committee House: minutes include recorded roll call vote on each House: notice posted the bill referred out. preceding Wed. or Thurs., depending on the committee ★ Senate: 2 days Senate: every member present shall vote unless excused House: 5 days by the committee. Bills are reported by recorded roll call vote. House: every member present must vote. Bills are reported by recorded roll call vote. ★ Senate: none Senate: roll call vote. House: 3 days for hearings House: voice vote/show of hands, except that a requested by author; committee member can obtain a roll call vote 10 days during interim. if requested prior to the vote.

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RULES ADOPTION AND STANDING COMMITTEES: PROCEDURE — Continued

State or other jurisdiction

Constitution permits Committee meetings each legislative open to public* body to determine House/ its own rules Senate Assembly

Oregon ............................

Pennsylvania .................

Rhode Island .................

South Carolina ..............

South Dakota .................

Tennessee .......................

Texas ...............................

Utah ................................

Vermont .........................

Virginia ..........................

★ (a)

Washington ....................

West Virginia .................

Wisconsin .......................

Wyoming ........................

Puerto Rico ....................

Specific, advance notice provisions for committee meetings or hearings

Senate: 24 hours House: 24 hours (d)

Senate: the vote on all official actions is recorded. House: motions on measures before a committee are by recorded roll call vote. Senate: none Senate: a majority vote of committee members. House: none House: all votes are recorded. Senate: 48 hours prior to meeting. Senate: majority vote of the members present. House: 48 hours prior to meeting. House: majority vote of the members present. Senate: 24 hours Senate: no bill may be polled out unless at least 2/3 of House: 24 hours the members are polled. Poll results are certified and published in journal. House: favorable report out of committee (majority of committee members voting in favor). Senate and House: Senate and House: a majority vote of the members-elect at least one legislative daytaken by roll call is needed for final disposition must intervene between the on a bill. This applies to both houses. is needed for final disposition committee agenda and the committee meeting. Senate: 6 days Senate: aye and no votes cast by name on each question House: 72 hours when House are recorded. is recessed or adjourned House: bills are reported out by recorded roll call vote. Senate: 24 hours Senate: bills are reported by recorded roll call vote. House: (e) House: committee reports include the record vote by which the report was adopted, including the vote of each member. Senate: 24 hours Senate: each member present votes on every question House: 24 hours and all votes are recorded. House: each member present votes on every question and all votes are recorded. Senate: none Senate: vote is recorded for each committee member House: none for every bill considered. House: vote is recorded for each committee member for every bill considered. Senate: none Senate: generally, a recorded vote is taken for each House: none measure. House: vote of each member is taken and recorded for each measure. Senate: 5 days Senate: bills reported from a committee carry a majority House: 5 days report which must be signed by a majority of the committee. House: every vote to report a bill out of committee is by yeas and nays; the names of the members voting are recorded in the report. Senate: none Senate: majority of committee House: none members voting. House: majority of committee members voting. Senate: a list of public hearings Senate: number of ayes and noes, and members absent is filed Monday of the preceding or not voting are reported. week House: number of ayes and noes are recorded. House: a list of public hearings is filed Monday of the preceding week Senate: by 3:00 p.m. of previous Senate: bills are reported out by recorded roll call vote. day House: bills are reported out by recorded roll call vote. House: by 3:00 p.m. of previous day Senate: Must be notified every Senate: bills reported from a committee carry a Thurs., one week in advance. majority vote House: bills reported from a committee carry a majority vote by referendum House: 24 hours advanced notice, no later than or in an ordinary meeting. 4:00 p.m. previous day

Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003 and October 2004. Key: ★— Yes * — Notice of committee meetings may also be subject to state open meetings laws; in some cases, listed times may be subject to suspension or enforceable only to the extent “feasible or “whenever possible. U — Unicameral. (a) Certain matters may be discussed in executive session. (Other states permit meetings to be closed for various reasons,but their rules do not specifically mention “executive session.”) (b) Not referenced specifically, but each body publishes rules and there are

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Voting/roll call provisions to report a bill to floor

joint rules. (c) Not referenced specifically, but each body publishes rules. (d) May go to one hour notice when president and speaker proclaim sine de imminent. (e) The House requires five calendar days notice before a public hearing at which testimony will be taken, and two hours notice or an announcement from the floor before a formal meeting (testimony cannot be taken at a formal meeting). (f) The prohibition does not apply if the action receives a majority vote of the committee. (g) If public hearing, five calendar days.


Chapter Four

STATE EXECUTIVE BRANCH



GOVERNORS

The State of the States in 2005: Facing Up to the Problem? By Katherine Willoughby State governors’ loathing of tax increases is never more apparent than in this year’s state of the state addresses. In 2005, most governors are promoting economic development through tax cuts and credits in order to be able to light up an “open for business” sign in their state. Many governors are also calling for spending reductions and/or agency and program reorientations or reorganizations in order to reach budget balance.

Introduction

are on the rise. Still, there is hesitancy in declaring Last year, governors’ addresses to their citizens that state fiscal skies are clear. Common refrains inabout state fiscal environments were somber, “less clude, “We should do more” or “We should do betdire” than in 2003, but “no less worrisome.” This ter.” In the words of New Hampshire’s governor, “I year, governors are still hesitant to claim seeing more am not here to advocate for more government, but than some clouds parting to reveal a bit of blue in better government, and that starts with open, ethical, their fiscal skies.1 In the words of Nebraska’s gover- honest government.” As noted above, a primary view nor, “the budget proposal before you reflects both of governors is that states have a spending problem optimism and caution.” Idaho’s governor is equally and not a revenue problem. In Vermont, a state with cautious, “even with a conservative spending plan, a fairly diversified tax structure and one that is very and the benefit of year-end surpluses, we may very inclusive of citizens in budgetary decisions, Gov. Jim well find ourselves with a shortfall in FY2007.” The Douglas declares that “it is important to acknowlbulk of worry rests with ever increasing Medicaid edge that we did not get in this situation because costs. Thus, it is not surprising that a prominent theme Vermonters are taxed too little; we’re here because of state government chief executives in 2005 is government has spent too much.” Indiana’s goverchange. South Carolina’s governor speaks for many nor is even more direct, “state government is too regarding the future of the states, “to prosper and to thrive economically and academically, things have to change. Table A That has to be our path.” While STATE TAX COLLECTIONS BY TYPE OF TAX, 1994 AND 2004, these chief executives have laid 3RD QUARTER out a profusion of tax and spend ideas to reach budget balance, (in percent) focused attention seems directed mostly to the spending 1994 2004 side of the state budget equaGeneral sales and gross receipts 34.6% 33.8% tion. That is, governors in 2005 Individual income tax 31.5 33.5 Motor fuel sales 7.1 5.8 are claiming out of control Corporate net income 6.6 5.5 spending as the biggest fiscal Motor vehicles 3.3 3.0 Other sales and gross receipts 2.3 2.1 varmint. Tobacco products 2.0 2.1 As expected, most state of Insurance 2.0 2.0 All other taxes including: 10.4 12.3 the state addresses begin with property tax, public utilities, a litany of successes and pari-mutuels, amusements, beverage and other licenses, death, gift and changes realized in fiscal 2004 severance taxes, taxes on document for which governors are claimand stock transactions. ing credit. Many drum relevant Source: Table 3: State Tax Collections by State and Type of Tax. statistics – that personal income Data available in excel files qtx043t3 and qtx943t3 at http://www.census.gov/govs/www.qtax.html. Accessed on March 4, 2005. is up, jobs are on the increase, wages are growing, and that tourism and/or housing starts The Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS

Table B STATE REVENUE GENERATING STRATEGIES IN FISCAL YEARS 2003 AND 2004 Revenue generating strategy (a) Use carry-forward balances in the general fund Draw down other contingency funds Use one-time/windfall revenue Increase tax collection enforcement Increase short-term borrowing Change tax structure to generate revenue increase Use additional debt financing Use budget stabilization or rainy day fund Increase and/or add fees/charge Use non-routine transfers from other fund Conduct debt refinancing Conduct sale of assets

Fiscal year 2003 41% 9 74 63 7 39 15 26 54 57 37 24

Fiscal year 2004 67% 57 54 54 52 43 33 23 17 15 15 7

four common-sense fundamentals – economic revitalization, education, quality of life and governance. …To that end, we need a tax policy that is not only friendly to our citizens, but also creates a competitive environment for business. Business as usual will leave us behind our neighboring states.”

Tax Collections and Changes, Then and Now

Table A illustrates a comparison of state tax proportions in 1994 and 2004. Subtle change in proportions over time indiSource: Government Performance Project 2005 State Survey, http://www.results.gpponline.org. Note: To balance budgets many states make changes to revenues, expenditures and debt. States cates that states now depend indicated that the following revenue actions were used to realize a balanced budget at the end of equally on general sales and pereach fiscal year noted (percent of states responding that action was used). Key: sonal income taxes. The cat(a) The number of survey responses was 46 for all revenue generating strategies except for “use egory “All other taxes” combudget stabilization or rainy day fund” and “use non-routine transfers from other fund”. Those netted 47 responses. prises a larger share of total tax proportion in the states than 10 years ago. Continued chipping expensive, too antique in its practices, too indiffer- away at business-related taxes in the last decade is ent to real, provable results, and in place after place most clearly evidenced in the decline of the corporate after place, too slow….overhanging all our difficul- income tax as a significant state tax resource. In truth, 2004 actual revenues bested 2004 estities is the simple, brute fact that our state’s public finances are in ruin. We have outspent our income mates in most states. Still, following passage of fisyear after year.” Minnesota’s Gov. Tim Pawlenty cal 2005 budgets, virtually half (24) of the states inconcurs that “[s]ome will argue that we should raise stituted tax and fee changes expected to yield $3.5 taxes rather than slow the growth in these programs. billion more in revenues. The breakdown of revenue That is simply unrealistic. Income tax revenues would changes to realize this $3.5 billion includes: have to double every eight years to pay for these pro- ■ 25 percent from changes to cigarette/tobacco taxes grams at their current rate of growth. We must restrain the growth in these programs to sustainable ■ 20 percent from changes to sales taxes levels by wisely and humanely changing them so they are comparable to surrounding states, and more fo- ■ 20 percent from additions or changes to other taxes2 cused on those with the fewest resources and the greatest needs.” ■ 14 percent from changes to or institution of new There are a few exceptions to the focus on spendfees ing. South Dakota’s Gov. Mike Rounds points out that “some people have falsely claimed that the structural ■ 12 percent from changes to personal income taxes deficit [in this state] was caused because past legislatures just wanted to spend more money. The truth is ■ 8 percent from changes to corporate income taxes that the structural deficit was caused by the repeal of changes to taxes on motor the inheritance tax, the loss of gold mining taxes and ■ <1 percent each from fuels and alcohol3 the repeal of the transportation tax. All that added up to $39 million less in ongoing taxes collected every year.” Some governors are emphasizing both sides of the budget equation as problematic. Perhaps Utah’s governor sums the up general tenor of addresses this year. “My administration’s policy priorities focus on 184

The Book of the States 2005

As illustrated above, collectively the states have relied most heavily on “sin” taxes for added revenue —the greatest proportion of new revenue in 2005 is expected from tax and fee increases related to cigarettes and tobacco products. Also, “collections of sales,


GOVERNORS personal income, and corporate income taxes are projected to increase by 7.1 percent over prior year tax collections in fiscal 2005, based on enacted budgets” (NASBO, ix). After two years of real decline in state general funds in 2002 and 2003, and no growth in 2004, the real increase of 1.8 percent in 2005 is heartening (NASBO, p. 4). On the other hand, 2005 state expenditures have increased by 4.5 percent above prior years. And total year-end balances as a percent of expenditures are expected to remain below those in 2004; in 2005, this ratio is expected to be 3.4 percent, compared to 4.8 percent in 2004.

State Budget Balancing Measures The 2005 Government Performance Project (GPP)4 examined states regarding their financial management capacities. The project’s recent survey results confirm how difficult it has been for states to balance in the last few years. When asked about the actions taken to stay on budget in recent years, states responded to using a multitude of revenue and expenditure actions. Table B illustrates that in 2003 more than half of states used one-time revenue, increased tax collection enforcement, used non-routine transfers from other funds, and increased or added fees and charges to pump up revenues. By 2004, in addition to using windfall revenues and increasing tax collection enforcement, more than half of states also used carry-forward balances in the general fund, raided any contingency funds, and substantially increased their use of short-term borrowing to facilitate cash flow. Other revenue generating strategies used in either 2003 or 2004 include changing tax structures, using additional debt financing or conducting debt refinancing, and tapping rainy day or budget stabilization funds. A number of states also indicate using different methods not listed on the survey to increase revenues in these two years. Such methods include: ■

Initiating tax amnesty programs;

Accelerating tax payments (specifically, withholding);

Pausing tax rate reductions and setting rates to begin later in the year;

Suspending implementation of voter initiatives to divert general funds elsewhere.

States also engaged a multitude of measures to reduce spending in these years. As illustrated in Table C, the most common expenditure reduction strategy used is simply cutting spending—most likely in a targeted way, but across the board as well. A majority (60 percent) of states conducted a hiring freeze in 2003; just 38 percent of states claimed use of this measure in 2004. Many states, although not a majority, also conducted program reorganizations in both years to reduce costs. Cutting aid to local governments was a fairly popular method of reducing or delaying state expenditures in both years – over a quarter of states cut local aid in 2003 and 2004. Close to a quarter of states indicate initiating layoffs in 2003; down to 15 percent of states indicating layoffs by 2004. All of the other methods for reining in spending were used in both years, even if by just a few states. A number of states also indicate using methods not listed to reduce expenditures in these two years. Such methods include: ■

Initiating early retirement program(s);

Freezing merit raises of state employees; suspending annual employee cost of living adjustments;

Terminating and/or amending state contracts;

Eliminating funding to non-essential appropriations;

Suspending transfers from the general fund;

Delaying scheduled payments to K-12 schools and payments to counties for property tax relief;

Lapsing unspent agency appropriations to the General Fund and not allowing appropriations to be carried forward;

Requiring or increasing employee contributions to health care costs; placing HMO plans into cost/ efficiency tiers; engaging a pharmacy-benefits manager;

Establishing holidays on state payments for state employee sick leave conversion liability; and

Joining a multi-state lottery consortium;

Adding new games to the state’s lottery;

Securitizing tobacco settlement proceeds;

Recurrent Themes

Diverting tobacco settlement proceeds to the general fund; and

Recurrent themes throughout the 2005 gubernatorial addresses include increasing and/or creating state relief programs for the military—through tu-

Implementing monthly agency spending targets.

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GOVERNORS ition assistance, increased death benefit payments, Mexico’s Gov. Bill Richardson offers tax exemptions and/or new programs and services specifically for for that state’s aviation industry, and he seeks to create veterans and their families. For example, the gov- the New Mexico Spaceport Authority to further deernor of Oklahoma proposes “Operation velop this industry. In general, recommended educaHomefront” to provide “a tax exemption for mili- tion programs, research and development and other initary pension income for all veterans and purchase a tiatives mentioned are geared to stemming out-migra$250,000 life insurance policy for every Guards- tion as well as advancing in-migration. New York’s man.” Some state legislatures are beginning to re- Gov. Georgia Pataki wants New York to become first spond accordingly by passing part or all of such in in-sourcing jobs. “Let’s focus not just on keeping initiatives. Governors also brought up the Indian jobs, but on attracting new jobs and new investments Ocean tsunami disaster and either recognized their from around the world.” As noted earlier, governors are very cognizant of state’s support thus far or pledged additional relief the continued mismatch between state revenues and to this part of the world. Most governors recognize the influence of the expenditures—many consider that it is not taxes that “global economy” on the direction of their state, are too low, but spending that is too high. This is a many couching their initiatives as methods of en- scenario that most recognize cannot continue withgagement with this economy. Minnesota’s gover- out significant consequences to the wealth of states nor explains, “We all need to grasp the importance and well being of citizens. Minnesota’s governor of the Rochester model. They’re a successful glo- emphasizes that “keeping a lid on taxes is not just bal competitor. Why? Because they have seamlessly good for the taxpayer. It’s a powerful way to force integrated science, technology, infrastructure, en- government to be more accountable, set priorities and trepreneurship, a partnering role for government, spend smarter.” Most point to Medicaid as the priand lots and lots of hard work. Global competitive- mary spending culprit. Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee ness is Minnesota’s strategic objective. We have lots paints a picture evidenced in most states —almost all of work to do to get us there.” This theme coincides (91 percent) of the state’s general revenue funds Medwith governors’ concerns related to economic de- icaid, education and prisons. Thus, many governors velopment, job growth and specifically the out-mi- expressed worry about how to fulfill Medicaid comgration of their young citizens. Many are advertis- mitments, both now and in the future. Vermont’s goving their states as “open for business.” Others seek ernor characterizes this area of state budgets as “growto initiate and/or strengthen programs that make it ing at an unsustainable rate.” Gov. Mitch Daniels proattractive for native born citizens to settle in state poses big changes to Medicaid in Indiana. “We will and pursue productive work. For example, Maine’s slow this unsustainable growth rate by half. Over time, governor suggests an “aggressive telecommunications strategy” so that every Mainer can Table C “plug into the global economy from their community.” Iowa’s STATE EXPENDITURE REDUCTION MEASURES IN FISCAL YEARS governor talks of expansion of 2003 AND 2004 “Great Places” throughout the Fiscal year Fiscal year state by energizing a consorExpenditure strategy (a) 2003 2004 tium of state agencies to work Make targeted spending cuts 77% 68% together to streamline applicaConduct across the board spending cuts 68 47 tion processes, better package Initiate program reorganization 40 47 Freeze hiring 60 38 resources, and target the most Cut local aid 28 26 innovative communities in the Implement privatization initiatives 13 17 Initiate layoffs 23 15 state. In Illinois, the governor Reduce contribution to pension funds 15 11 is asking for more financial inDelay payments for purchases 17 9 centives to draw in companies Source: Government Performance Project 2005 State Survey, http://www.results.gpponline.org. that make homeland security Note: To balance budgets many state make changes to revenues, expenditures and debt. States indicated that the following expenditure actions were used to realize a balanced budget at the end of each products, as well as support for fiscal year noted (percent of states responding that action was used). building a new airport in Key: (a) The number of survey responses for the expenditure strategies was 47. Peotone to expand air travel into and through the state. New 186

The Book of the States 2005


GOVERNORS we will rebuild a broken, antiquated system so that it delivers better care to those who cannot afford to care for themselves, while remembering that taxpayers deserve compassion too.” State chief executives continue to have management reform on their minds as well. Washington’s governor proposes “legislation to establish a new government management accountability and performance approach to government —GMAP for short.” In this state—already well known for doing an excellent job managing information, the mantra “We should do better” helps focus on holding state agencies accountable for achieving results effectively and efficiently. Similarly, Oregon’s governor claims to have thrown out the old rulebook—“This is not a current services budget. It funds programs based on whether they produce measurable outcomes.” This budget also boasts a spending limitation and rainy day fund. According to Gov. Ted Kulongoski, “in 2005, we need to think and act differently.” Governors from both Rhode Island and South Dakota propose a red tape reduction taskforce to help eliminate barriers to conducting business and streamline government operations. New Hampshire’s governor has been busy “zero-basing every department budget,” requiring justification to the penny. Michigan’s Gov. Jennifer Granholm mentions state reorganization as well as the abolishment of numerous boards and commissions as paths to greater efficiency. New York’s governor is also asking to eliminate or consolidate “hundreds of commissions, task forces, boards and authorities that have been established over the course of many decades.” In addition, Gov. Pataki asks that the state pass its budget on time—an important component of public budgeting transparency. Interestingly, Rhode Island’s governor is throwing “open the doors of the state to all citizens who want to participate” by asking Rhode Islanders to apply for appointments on numerous boards and commissions in that state. Other efficiency efforts focus on specific management areas. Nebraska’s governor suggests advancing technology and “striving to be a customer friendly, customer responsive government in everything we do, from issuing permits to answering telephones.” Efficiency efforts promoted by Tennessee’s chief executive run the gambit from revamping the issuance and renewal of driver’s licenses to continuing the overhaul of Medicaid. Missouri’s governor presents a budget that includes a reduction of more than 1,000 full time state positions. Illinois’ governor wants the state’s Finance Authority to “look at new ways to provide financing for wind farms.”

Reorganization ideas abound as well. Delaware’s governor proposes a significant reorganization, “centralizing the administrative and support functions of state government in one agency.” West Virginia’s Gov. Joe Manchin wants reorganization in that state “with the goal of being more accountable for our actions and more coordinated in our economic development efforts.” This governor is also seeks pension reform to remedy the fact that the state is currently spending over 11 percent of its revenues annually on pension liabilities. Specifically, Gov. Manchin is asking citizens to support a referendum to establish “a fixed mortgage payment to pay off unfunded liabilities.” Gov. Daniels is calling for dramatic reorganization of Indiana’s bureaucracy and has appointed the state’s first inspector general to ferret out government waste. New Jersey’s governor is creating an inspector general too. Maine’s Gov. John Baldacci seeks to “consolidate financial, information technology, payroll, human resources, and administrative hearings services” to save the state $11 million in the next two years. Georgia’s governor has appointed a state property officer to conduct a complete inventory of and better manage state property. This governor has also invested in a business approach to government through engagement of a Commission for New Georgia which he touts in his address. This group of business and policy leaders feeds ideas about good management practices to Gov. Perdue. As well, the governor has reorganized his office, with an eye toward a state government that is customer service oriented. Similarly, Wisconsin’s governor is redesigning the way that state conducts business. “We’re rebidding costly state contracts…. We’re trimming the state’s vehicle fleet back to its level a decade ago. …For the first time, we’re asking state employees to pay a portion of their health insurance…. We’ve cut discretionary pay bonuses by 92 percent. We’ve eliminated more than 1,500 cell phones and sold seven airplanes.” In Montana, the governor has formed a performance review committee to ask citizens and state employees alike for their ideas on how to deliver state services more efficiently. In the area of education, specifically, many different efficiency measures are being touted by governors. For example, more than a few mention developing “centers of excellence” in state university systems, possibly requiring increased tuition to do so. Colorado’s example of funding students, rather than academic institutions is another way of thinking about changed funding and funding channels for education in states. Indiana’s governor has called for a moratorium on school building to support “instruction beThe Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS fore construction.” In Michigan, the governor is asking the state’s universities to institute credit amnesty – “accept old credits of adults who re-enroll within the next three years to finish their degrees.” Governors also talked of support for student receipt of college credit in high school to more quickly advance students through educational systems and on to viable careers. In Arizona, the governor spoke of all day kindergarten, moving students beyond high school to enhanced career and technical education – highlighting a renewed interest in states about community and technical colleges —and commitment to funding a medical school collaborative.

Revenue Ideas Budget worries have not stemmed gubernatorial ideas about cutting taxes. Idaho’s Gov. Dirk Kempthorne outlines a very specific tax incentive package for businesses. If a company in this state makes certain investments within a given timeframe, the governor proposes: ■

A doubling of the investment tax credit to six percent for a five-year period;

Removing the 50 percent limit on the investment tax credit;

An enhanced jobs tax credit;

A new income tax credit for real property improvement;

Property tax abatement on qualified new construction; and

Sales tax abatement on construction materials.

This governor also recommends that the state consider increasing the level of bonding to support capital investment. Idaho traditionally maintains a very low debt level compared to other states. Maine’s governor joins Idaho’s in looking to increased use of debt, in Maine’s case, to support biomedical research and collaboration. South Carolina’s governor is depending upon reduction of the income tax to make that state more competitive. Pennsylvania’s Gov. Edward Rendell is focusing on reducing the corporate income tax rate and modernizing the business tax structure of the Commonwealth. Tax credits are being recommended in New York, despite the fact that as Gov. Pataki notes, “New Yorkers’ tax burden is $15 billion less today because of the broad, sweeping, fundamental changes we made in our tax code beginning in 1995.” The governor is also recommending acceleration of the phase188

The Book of the States 2005

out of the state’s temporary personal income tax increase. And, his plan includes property tax relief. The governor of Texas has a “game-plan” to eliminate that state’s corporate tax over the next few years, combined “with a short-term strategy on reducing the food tax and change income taxes.” Washington’s governor is calling for tax relief for small and start-up enterprises. Some states are taking advantage of increased revenues expected this year. In Alaska, the governor has proposed gas and oil credits for new fields. This state is experiencing a significant windfall in revenues for fiscal 2005, given high oil prices. This governor proposes to use the windfall for education and non-recurring expenditures, expressing that the increase in revenues should be considered “temporary.” Wyoming and Montana are other states that have flush revenues, comparatively speaking. According to Wyoming’s Gov. Dave Freudenthal, “We have money. Our revenues are remarkable and our prospects are bright. Money should not, and must not, change our commitment to solving problems and building this state. …The amount of money available changes the rate at which we can convert our values into action – it should not change our values.” Hawaii’s governor wants “to use some of the revenues generated by [the state’s] recent prosperity to pay for a modest yet important $63 million tax cut over the next two years for individuals and families with low to moderate incomes.” Gov. Linda Lingle calculates that this tax cut would mean that “27,000 people will not longer have to file state tax returns, and 78,000 more will see their taxes reduced.” She is also proposing food and medical tax credits, credits to advance partnerships between the state university and business, a reduction in the unemployment insurance tax wage base, a tax credit for the purchase of long-term care insurance, and greater flexibility for the state’s department of commerce to institute more cuts to fees and assessments. New Mexico’s Gov. Richardson seeks to make a difference through tax cuts that include sales tax holidays, income tax exemptions, and eliminating the single parent penalty. Mississippi’s governor just asks to reform the unemployment tax formula – “Over the last 20 years, because of flaws in the formula used in our state, we have been collecting much, much more in unemployment taxes than is needed to pay unemployment benefits.” Ohio’s governor has a tax reform plan to “cut personal income tax rates by 21 percent over five years, eliminate state income tax for Ohioans making less than $10,000 a year, and phasing out the tax on equip-


GOVERNORS ment and inventory and corporate tax.” This plan is expected to reduce state revenues by $800 million in the next two years. The governor is asking for “restrained spending and reduced Medicaid growth” to support this tax reform package. Rhode Island’s governor has presented a five-year tax reduction plan that includes “new lottery revenues dedicated to direct property tax relief.” Kentucky’s governor is asking for extensive tax modernization—suggesting an income tax rate reduction along with numerous tax credits—in construction, research and development, Brownfields, clean coal technology and other environmentally related areas —historic preservation credits, and tuition tax credits. Gov. Granholm recommended the Michigan Jobs and Investment Act which, if enacted, would mean that “three out of four business tax payers will pay significantly less.” Maryland’s governor is encouraging business growth, specifically filmmaking “by offering film companies a rebate on the first $25,000 of wages paid to production employees on locations in the state.” New Mexico’s governor also seeks an extension of that state’s 15 percent refund on filming expenses. Maryland’s chief executive is also promoting extension of the state’s research and development tax credit as well as addition of an “entrepreneurial investment technology tax credit” to advance business in-migration to the state. Governors are marking the property tax for reform too. Missouri’s governor suggests that school districts be allowed to use a sales or income tax to alleviate heavy dependence on the property tax. Maine’s governor addressed the citizens of that state after signing into law government and property tax reforms that establish spending caps and expand property tax relief. Wisconsin’s governor proposes simplifying the form used for the homestead credit— from 17 to one page. Also, “instead of just giving incentives to achieve a target property tax increase, we will provide bonuses for municipalities and counties that hold their property taxes even lower.” In Texas, the governor agrees with property tax relief, taking it further, “It is time to cut property taxes for hardworking people of Texas. In fact, let’s not only give Texans property tax relief…let’s give them appraisal relief too. …Let’s cap appraisals at three percent.” Gov. Rick Perry seeks new revenues by instituting a “broad-based business tax that is fairly distributed, assessed at a low rate and reflects our modern economy.” Iowa’s governor is asking for a tax rollback as well as a cap on future property tax increases. This

governor also seeks an increase in the cigarette and tobacco related taxes, to be earmarked for health care. Kentucky’s governor has requested an increase in the cigarette tax as “a matter of fairness and sound public policy.” Even North Carolina’s governor Michael Easley states that “the time has come to significantly increase the cigarette tax and reduce teen smoking.” Other interesting revenue generating strategies mentioned include Gov. Daniels’ call to “the most fortunate among us, those citizens earning over $100,000 per year, for one year, to pay an additional one percent on the income they receive” to help balance the budget. Maryland’s governor is asking for “a fully phased in slots program” that could mean more than $800 million in new revenue to the state annually. California’s governor is presently stumping for a referendum similar to the federal government’s GrammRudman-Hollings sequester law (Emergency Deficit Control Act of 1985). In a special legislative session, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger says, “I will submit to you legislation that cuts expenditures across the board when they grow above revenues. We must take back responsibility for the budget. We must have a new approach that overrides the formulas, overrides the special interests and overrides the forces that have turned some of you from legislators into clerks.” The governor also characterized the state’s pension system as “out of control,” calling for movement from a defined benefit to a defined contribution system. Colorado’s governor seeks fiscal redress through the “specific provisions of TABOR” to support the state’s transportation infrastructure, higher education and public safety needs. “This plan also proposed tax relief for working families. We should take a commonsense step to prevent the government from collecting dollars it can’t use. Let’s roll the personal income tax rate back to 4.5 percent.”

Conclusion While governors’ tax and other revenue generating strategies generate the most interest, many other areas of policy interest were mentioned in this year’s addresses. Governors also talked about: ■

Cost containment of prescription drugs;

Reducing the opportunities to develop and deal methamphetamines;

Changing funding relationships with local governments;

Advancing protection of natural resources, the environment, development of renewable energy resources, and water conservation;

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GOVERNORS ■

Strengthening government ethics law;

Initiating elections reform;

Negotiating related to tribal gaming;

Advancing homeland security and public safety; and

Legislating tort reform.

The Cato Institute’s most recent fiscal policy report card5 on U.S. governors finds most to be performing at an average to below average level, given their measure of excellence as keeping tax rates low and constraining spending. More than half (27) of governors received a grade of C or lower according to the Institute’s fiscal policy measurement. Only four governors, two “freshmen” and two “seniors,” received an “A” for promoting low tax rates and spending growth—those from California, Colorado, Montana and New Hampshire. Certainly we can see that tax reform and, in particular, lowering taxes remains on the minds of most governors. And, many, if not most states have tinkered with their tax structures in the last few years. Finally, most states have employed many different revenue generating methods in the last two years in attempts to keep pace with spending. Perhaps North Dakota illustrates the fine line that governors walk concerning the need to increase revenues, support economic development, and manage spending commitments. North Dakota’s Gov. John Hoeven (who received a “B” from the Cato Institute Study) explains this state’s present good fortune. “As a result of growing revenues and good fiscal management, we will close this biennium with an ending fund balance of nearly $130 million, the largest in 20 years. And our state’s revenues are projected to be strong through the next biennium. We have achieved these results through aggressive economic development efforts and we have achieved them without a tax increase.” Going forward, this governor is calling for “more venture capital and investment tax credits for small businesses, …doubling the Homestead Tax Credit and repealing the unemployment insurance offset to Social Security for working seniors.” In light of their typical abhorrence for tax increases, it is hopeful that governors’ focus this year is on restraining spending and retooling state government. Clearly, states cannot continue down a road in which revenues are lost (through tax cuts and credits) while spending commitments grow. If governors are going to stick to holding the line on revenues and even to retrenching revenues, then they must look to either 190

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increased borrowing to support spending growth or cut spending and/or the commitments that grow spending. Governors seem to be alerting their citizens that they have picked up some fiscal shears and are ready to start using them.

Notes 1 U.S. governors report annually or biennially to their legislatures regarding the fiscal condition of their state, commonwealth or territory. Governors may use their address to lay out their policy and budget agendas for their upcoming or continuing administration. The 2005 state of the state addresses were accessed from January through March 1, 2005 at the National Governors Association Web site: Just two states, Florida and Louisiana, did not have the 2005 state of the state addresses on this Web site during this time. All quotes and data presented here are from the addresses available on this website, unless otherwise noted. 2 Other taxes include any taxes not falling into mentioned categories – examples include taxes on nursing homes, gas and oil production, real estate conveyance, live entertainment, research and development, and other activities, services, and items. 3 NASBO, The Fiscal Survey of the States, (Washington, D.C.: NASBO, December 2004), Table 7: Enacted Fiscal 2005 Revenue Actions by Type of Revenue and Net Increase or Decrease, p. 10. 4 The GPP mission is to provide states information that can advance government management to achieve public goals and objectives. The GPP conducts a 50 state survey every few years that assesses states’ capacity in managing financial and human resources, information and technology, and physical infrastructure. In 2005, the GPP conducted its survey online and integrated work of both academics and journalists to determine grades for states in each of these four areas. Results from this survey are available at www.results.gpponline.org. The GPP is sponsored by a grant from the Pew Charitable Trusts. 5 Stephen Moore and Stephen Slivinski, “Fiscal Policy Report Card on America’s Governors: 2004,” Policy Analysis Report No. 537, (Washington, D.C.: The Cato Institute, March 2005).

About the Author Katherine Willoughby is professor of Public Administration and Urban Studies in the Andrew Young School of Policy Studies at Georgia State University in Atlanta. Her research concentrates on state and local government budgeting and financial management, public policy development and public organization theory. She has conducted extensive research in the area of state budgeting practices, with a concentration on performance measurement applicability at this level of government in the United States.


GOVERNORS

Governors: Elections, Campaign Costs and Powers By Thad Beyle The 2004 gubernatorial elections and resignations continued the recent trend of changes in the governorships across the states. In addition to the 11 gubernatorial races, two governors resigned before their terms were up. In 2005, 37 of the incumbent governors will be serving in their first term. As in the past, there was a great range in gubernatorial election costs. During the four and a half decades, the overall institutional powers of governors continued to increase, especially in their veto power. The governors continue to be in the forefront of activity as we move into the 21st century. With Republican governors across the states serving as his major supporters and guides, Texas Gov. George W. Bush sought and won the presidency in the 2000 election. He became the fourth of the last five presidents who had served as governor just prior to seeking and winning the presidency.1 When George H. W. Bush, a non-governor, won the 1988 presidential election, he beat a governor, Michael Dukakis (D–Mass., 1975-1979 and 1983-1991). Clearly, presidential politics in the three decades following the Watergate scandal finds governors as major actors. Additionally, the demands on the governors to propose state budgets and then to keep them in balance during the two recessions of the early 1990s and now in the early 2000s has made that governor’s chair a “hot seat” in more ways than one.2 In the current downturn, governors have moved from the half-decade of economic boom of the late 1990s, in which they could propose tax cuts and program increases, to an economic downturn period in which there is increasing demand for program support while state tax revenues fell off significantly. Proposed and adopted budgets fell victim to severe revenue shortfalls in most all of the states. Easy times had switched to hard times again. Now as we enter 2005, there are signs of an upturn in the economy easing some of the budgetary problems that governors have been facing.

2004 Gubernatorial Politics The 2004 gubernatorial elections and resignations continued the recent trend of changes in the governorships across the states. In addition to the 11 gubernatorial races, two governors resigned their positions and left office before their terms were up. In the 2004 gubernatorial elections, all 11 incumbent governors were eligible to seek re-election. However, three of the incumbents decided not to seek another term—Judy Martz (R-Mont.), Gary Locke

(D-Wash.) and Bob Wise (D-W. Va.). Locke was finishing up his second term as governor while Martz and Wise were in their first and only terms. While the reasons for not seeking re-election varied, one common factor was apparent. In state level polls, each of the three had low job approval ratings. Their most recent ratings in 2003 - Martz 20 percent positive, Locke 33 percent positive, Wise 39 percent positive – were well below the average positive ratings of 55 percent for the 40 other governors for whom ratings were available. This meant that there was a considerable majority of potential voters who had a negative view on how well they had been performing as governor—hardly the strength that many incumbent governors have on their side in seeking re-election. The other eight incumbents did seek re-election to another term, but only four of them were successful —Ruth Ann Minner (D-Del.), Michael Easley (DN.C.), John Hoeven (R-N.D.) and Jim Douglas (RVt.)—a 50 percent success rate. Two of the other incumbents seeking another term were defeated in their own party’s nomination process. Bob Holden (D-Mo.) was defeated in the Democratic Primary by State Auditor Clair McCaskill. Olene Walker (R-Utah) failed to gain the Republican Party’s convention authorization to be one of the two candidates to be on the party’s primary ballot—she came in fourth on that pre-primary vote. As lieutenant governor, Walker became an “accidental governor” when Republican Gov. Mike Leavitt resigned to accept an appointment in the Bush Administration as head of the Environmental Protection Agency in November 2003. Two other incumbents seeking re-election were defeated in the November general election—Craig Benson (R-N.H.) was defeated by a 2-point margin by Democrat John Lynch, and Joe Kernan (D-Ind.) was defeated by an 8-point margin by Republican Mitch Daniels. Kernan was the other “accidental governor” who sought to win the seat for a full term The Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS

Table A: Gubernatorial Elections: 1970-2004 Number of incumbent governors Democratic Winner Year

Number of races Number Percent

Eligible to run Number

Percent

Actually ran Number Percent

Won Number

1970 1971 1972 1973

35 3 18 2

22 3 11 1

63% 100 61 50

29 0 15 1

83% ... 83 50

24 ... 11 1

83% ... 73 100

16 ... 7 ...

1974 1975 1976 1977

35 3 14 2

27 (f) 3 9 1

77 100 64 50

29 2 12 1

83 66 86 50

22 2 8 1

76 100 67 100

17 2 5 1

1978 1979 1980 1981

36 3 13 2

21 2 6 1

58 67 46 50

29 0 12 0

81 ... 92 ...

23 ... 12 ...

79 ... 100 ...

1982 1983 1984 1985

36 3 13 2

27 3 5 1

75 100 38 50

33 1 9 1

92 33 69 50

25 1 6 1

1986 1987 1988 1989

36 3 12 2

19 3 5 2

53 100 42 100

24 2 9 0

67 67 75 ...

1990 1991 1992 1993

36 3 12 2

19 (w) 2 8 0

53 67 67 0

33 2 9 1

1994 1995 1996 1997

36 3 11 2

11 (bb) 1 7 0

31 33 36 0

1998 1999 2000 2001

36 3 11 2

2002 2003 2004

36 4 (ii) 11

Totals: Number Percent

481 100

Percent

Percent

In In general primary election

36% ... 36 100

1 (a) ... 2 (c) 1 (e)

7 (b) ... 2 (d) ...

77 100 63 100

5 ... 3 ...

24 ... 33 ...

1 (g) ... 1 (i) ...

4 (h) ... 2(j) ...

16 ... 7 ...

73 ... 58 ...

7 ... 5 ...

30 ... 42 ...

2 (k) ... 2 (m) ...

5 (l) ... 3 (n) ...

76 100 67 100

19 ... 4 1

76 ... 67 100

6 1 2 ...

24 100 33 ...

1 (o) 1 (q) ... ...

5 (p) ... 2 (r) ...

18 1 9 ...

75 50 100 ...

15 ... 8 ...

83 ... 89 ...

3 1 1 ...

18 100 11 ...

1 (s) 1 (u) ... ...

2 (t) ... 1 (v) ...

92 67 75 50

23 2 4 1

70 100 44 100

17 ... 4 ...

74 ... 100 ...

6 2 ... 1

26 100 ... 100

... 1 (y) ... ...

6 (x) 1 (z) ... 1 (aa)

30 2 9 1

83 67 82 50

23 1 7 1

77 50 78 100

17 1 7 1

74 100 100 100

6 ... ... ...

26 ... ... ...

2 (cc) ... ... ...

4 (dd) ... ... ...

11 (ee) 31 2 67 8 73 2 100

27 2 7 0

75 67 88 ...

25 2 6 ...

93 100 86 ...

23 2 5 ...

92 100 83 ...

2 ... 1 ...

8 ... 17 ...

... ... ... ...

2 (ff) ... 1 (gg) ...

14 1 6

22 2 11

61 50 100

16 2 8

73 100 73

12 ... 4

75 ... 50

4 2 4

25 100 50

39 25 55

264 54.9

367 76.3

286 77.9

The Book of the States 2005

211 73.8

64% ... 64 ...

Number 8 ... 4 1

Source: The Book of the States, 2004, (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2004), 146, updated. Key: (a) Albert Brewer, D-Alabama. (b) Keith Miller, R-Alaska; Winthrop Rockefeller, R-Ark.; Claude Kirk, R-Fla.; Don Samuelson, R-Idaho; Norbert Tieman, R-Neb.; Dewey Bartlett, R-Okla.; Frank Farrar, R-S.D. (c) Walter Peterson, R-N.H.; Preston Smith, D-Texas. (d) Russell Peterson, R-Del.; Richard Ogilvie, R-Ill. (e) William Cahill, R-N.J. (f) One independent candidate won: James Longley of Maine. (g) David Hall, D-Okla. (h) John Vanderhoof, R-Colo.; Francis Sargent, R-Mass.; Malcolm Wilson, R-N.Y.; John Gilligan, D-Ohio. (i) Dan Walker, D-Ill. (j) Sherman Tribbitt, D-Del.; Christopher ‘Kit’ Bond, R-Mo. (k) Michael Dukakis, D-Mass., Dolph Briscoe, D-Texas. (l) Robert F. Bennett, R-Kan.; Rudolph G. Perpich, D-Minn.; Meldrim Thompson, R-N.H.; Robert Straub, D-Oreg.; Martin J. Schreiber, D-Wis. (m) Thomas L. Judge, D-Mont.; Dixy Lee Ray, D-Wash. (n) Bill Clinton, D-Ark.; Joseph P. Teasdale, D-Mo.; Arthur A. Link, D-N.D. (o) Edward J. King, D-Mass. (p) Frank D. White, R-Ark.; Charles Thone, R-Neb.; Robert F. List, R-Nev.; Hugh J. Gallen, D-N.H.; William P. Clements, R-Texas. (q) David Treen, R-La. (r) Allen I. Olson, R-N.D.; John D. Spellman, R-Wash.

192

Lost

75 26.2

... ... 2 (kk) 19 25.3

4 (hh) 2 (jj) 2 (ll) 56 74.7

(s) Bill Sheffield, D-Alaska (t) Mark White, D-Texas; Anthony S. Earl, D-Wis. (u) Edwin Edwards, D-La. (v) Arch A. Moore, R- W. Va. (w) Two Independent candidates won: Walter Hickel (Alaska) and Lowell Weiker (Conn.). Both were former statewide Republican office holders. (x) Bob Martinez, R-Fla.; Mike Hayden, R-Kan.; James Blanchard, DMich.; Rudy Perpich, DFL-Minn.; Kay Orr, R-Neb.; Edward DiPrete, R-R.I. (y) Buddy Roemer, R-La. (z) Ray Mabus, D-Miss. (aa) James Florio, D-N.J. (bb) One Independent candidate won: Angus King of Maine. (cc) Bruce Sundlun, D-R.I.; Walter Dean Miller, R-S.D. (dd) James E. Folsom, Jr., D-Ala.; Bruce King, D-N.M.; Mario Cuomo, D-N.Y.; Ann Richards, D-Texas. (ee) Two Independent candidates won: Angus King of Maine and Jesse Ventura of Minnesota. (ff) Fob James, R-Ala.; David Beasley, R-S.C. (gg) Cecil Underwood, R-W. Va. (hh) Don Siegelman, D-Ala.; Roy Barnes, D-Ga., Jim Hodges, D-S.C.; and Scott McCallum, R-Wis. (ii) The California recall election and replacement vote of 2003 is included in the 2003 election totals and as a general election for the last column. (jj) Gray Davis, D-Calif., Ronnie Musgrove, D-Miss. (kk) Bob Holden, D-Mo.; Olene Walker, R-Utah, lost in the pre-primary convention. (ll) Joe Kernan, D-Ind.; Craig Benson, R-N.H.


GOVERNORS but failed. As lieutenant governor, he became governor in September 2003 when incumbent Democratic Gov. Frank O’Bannon died. Thus the results of the 2004 elections brought seven new governors into office. They were split between the two parties—four Democrats and three Republicans—leaving the Republicans holding a 28 to 22 edge among the governors of the 50 states. The two governors who resigned their positions and left office in 2004 were John Rowland (R-Conn.) and Jim McGreevey (D-N.J.). Rowland was facing a potential impeachment process over some unethical if not criminal steps taken during his tenure in office and McGreevey admitted to being gay and having had an affair with another man while serving as governor. In a December 2004 plea bargain, Rowland pled guilty to a charge of corruption. Both were succeeded in office by a member of their own party. In Connecticut, Lt. Gov. M. Jodi Rell assumed the governorship on July 1st after Rowland had resigned on June 30th. In New Jersey, Senate President Richard Codey became acting governor on November 16th after McGreevey resigned on November 15th. In New Jersey’s unique succession arrangement, Codey had to retain his Senate post in addition to becoming acting governor as that was the basis of his succeeding to the office of governor.

Gubernatorial Elections As can be seen in Table A, in the 481 gubernatorial elections held between 1970 and 2004, incumbents were eligible to seek another term in 367 (76 percent) of the contests. Two hundred eighty-six eligible incumbents sought re-election (78 percent) and 211 of them succeeded (74 percent). Those who were defeated for re-election were more likely to lose in the general election than in their own party primary by a 2.9-to-1 ratio, although as noted two of the incumbent losses in 2004 were tied to party primaries. Not since 1994 had an incumbent governor been defeated in their own party’s primary. Democratic candidates held a winning edge in these elections held between 1970 and 2004 (55 percent). And in 195 races (41 percent) the results led to a party shift in which a candidate from a party other than the incumbent’s party won. Yet these party shifts have evened out over the years so that neither of the two major parties has an edge in these party shifts. In three of the five party shifts in the 2004 elections, a Democrat won the seat for the first time since the 1980 elections (Montana), and two Republicans won the seat for the first time since the 1984 elections (Indiana and Missouri). But there have been

some interesting patterns in these shifts over the past 35 years of gubernatorial elections. Between 1970 and 1992, Democrats won 200 of the 324 races for governor (62 percent). Then beginning in 1993 to date, Republicans leveled the playing field by winning 94 of the 157 races for governor (60 percent). Despite this Republican trend, Democratic candidates did win eight of the 11 gubernatorial races in 2000, when Gov. Bush won the presidency in a very close race. But, since the 1994 elections there have been more Republicans than Democrats serving as governor each year. Another factor in determining how many governors have served in the states is how many of the newly elected governors are truly new to the office and how many are returning after complying with constitutional term limits or holding other positions. Looking at the number of actual new governors taking office over a decade, the average number of new governors elected in the states dropped from 2.3 new governors per state in the 1950s to 1.9 in the 1970s and to 1.1 in the 1980s. In the 1990s, the rate began to move up a bit to 1.4 new governors per state. As we move through the first decade of the 21st century, we continue to find new faces in the governors’ offices. New governors were elected in 43 of 64 elections held between 2000 and 2004 (67 percent). And as noted, two other governors succeeded to the office during 2004. So, in 2005, 37 of the incumbent governors will be serving in their first term (74 percent). The beginning of the 21st century has certainly proved to be a time of change in the governors’ offices across the 50 states.

The New Governors Over the 2001-2004 cycle of gubernatorial elections and resignations, there were several different routes to the governor’s chair by the 37 elected governors and the two governors who have succeeded to the office. First were the 10 new governors who had previously held statewide office. These include: four attorneys general—Janet Napolitano (D-Ariz.), Jennifer Granholm (D-Mich.), Christine Gregoire (DWash.) and Jim Doyle (R-Wis.); two secretaries of state—Matt Blunt (R-Mo.) and Joe Manchin (D-W.Va.); two lieutenant governors—M. Jodi Rell (R-Conn.) and Kathleen Blanco (D-La.); one state insurance commissioner—Kathleen Sebelius (D-Kan.) and one state treasurer—Jim Douglas (R-Vt.). Second were the eight members or former members of Congress who returned to work within their state. These included U.S. Senator Frank Murkowski (R-Alaska) and U.S. Congressmen Bob Riley (RThe Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS

Table B: Total Costs of Gubernatorial Elections: 1977-2003 (in thousands of dollars) Total campaign costs Year

Number of races

Actual $

2004$ (a)

Average cost per state (2004$)

1977

2

$12,312

$38,840

$19,420

1978

36

102,342

300,125

8,337

Percent change in similar elections (b) N.A. N.A. (c)

1979

3

32,744

86,167

28,722

N.A.

1980

13

35,634

82,677

6,360

N.A.

1981

2

24,648

51,782

25,891

+33

1982

36

181,832

360,064

10,002

+20 (d)

1983

3

39,966

76,710

25,570

-11

1984

13

47,156

86,683

6,668

+5

1985

2

18,859

33,497

16,748

-35

1986

36

270,605

471,438

13,095

+31

1987

3

40,212

67,583

22,528

-12

52,208

84,343

7,029

-3 +120

1988

12 (e)

1989

2

47,902

73,809

36,905

1990

36

345,493

505,107

14,031

+7

1991

3

34,564

48,477

16,159

-28

1992

12

60,278

82,011

6,834

-3

1993

2

36,195

47,814

23,907

-35

1994

36

417,873

538,496

14,958

+7

1995

3

35,693

44,728

14,909

-8

68,610

85,019

7,729

+4 +11

1996

11 (f)

1997

2

44,823

53,045

26,522

1998

36

470,326

548,166

15,227

+2

1999

3

16,277

18,666

6,222

-58

2000

11

97,098

107,647

9,786

+27

2001

2

70,400

75,944

37,972

+43

2002

36

839,650

891,348

24,760

+63

2003

3

69,939

72,626

24,209

+289

Source: Thad Beyle. (a) Developed from the Table, “Historical Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers (CPI-U),” Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor. Each year’s actual expenditures are converted to the 2004$ value of the dollar to control for the effect of inflation over the period. (b) This represents the percent increase or decrease in 2004$ over the last bank of similar elections, i.e., 1977 v. 1981, 1978 v. 1982, 1979 v. 1983, etc. (c) The data for 1978 are a particular problem as the two sources compiling data on this year’s elections did so in differing ways that excluded some candidates. The result is that the numbers for 1978 under-represent the actual costs of these elections by some unknown amount. The sources

Ala.), Rod Blagojevich (D-Ill.), Ernie Fletcher (R-Ky.), John Baldacci (D-Maine), Robert Ehrlich (R-Md.), and Mark Sanford (R-S.C.). Former Congressman Bill Richardson (D-N.M.) had also served as an administrator in the Clinton administration. Third were six from the business sector: Craig Benson (R-N.H.), John Lynch (D-N.H.), John Hoeven (R-N.D.), Don Carcieri (R-R.I.), Jon Huntsman, Jr. (R-Utah) and Mark Warner (D-Va.). Fourth were the five legislators or former legislators who moved up from a district to a statewide office. These included Sonny Perdue (R-from the Ga. Senate), 194

The Book of the States 2005

are: Rhodes Cook and Stacy West, “1978 Advantage,” CQ Weekly Report,(1979): 1757-1758, and The Great Louisiana Spendathon (Baton Rouge: Public Affairs Research Council, March 1980). (d) This particular comparison with 1978 is not what it would appear to be for the reasons given in note (c). The amount spent in 1978 was more than indicated here so the increase is really not as great as it appears. (e) As of the 1986 election, Arkansas switched to a four-year term for the governor, hence the drop for 13 to 12 for this off-year. (f) As of the 1994 election, Rhode Island switched to a four-year term for the governor, hence the drop from 12 to 11 for this off-year.

Tim Pawlenty (R-from the Minn. House), Brad Henry (D-from the Okla. Senate), and Mike Rounds (R-from the S.D. Senate). Also, under New Jersey’s unique succession law, the current Senate President Richard Codey-D is now serving as acting governor after incumbent Jim McGreevey’s resignation. Fifth were the four mayors or former mayors: Linda Lingle (R-Maui, Hawaii), Jim McGreevey (DWoodbridge, N.J.), Ed Rendell (D-Philadelphia, Pa.) and Phil Bredesen (D-Nashville, Tenn.). Finally, were the six new governors who followed a unique path compared to their counterparts: actor-


GOVERNORS

1,200

Figure A: Gubernatorial Elections Expenditures (by millions of dollars) 1,148

2004 dollars (in millions)

1,000

$1,030

800

709

716

728

$668

$674

$685

657 575

600 508

400

$619

$542

$478

200

0

1977-1980 1981-1984 1985-1988 1989-1992 1993-1996 1997-2000 2000-2003

Source: Thad Beyle.

businessman Arnold Schwarzenegger (R-Calif.), former head of the Federal Office of Management and Budget Mitch Daniels (R-Ind.), former 2000 Winter Olympics Chairman Mitt Romney (R-Mass.), former Republican Party National Chairman Haley Barbour (R-Miss.), former State Supreme Court Justice Ted Kulongoski (D-Ore.) and former U.S. Attorney Dave Freudenthal (D-Wyo.). In the 371 gubernatorial races between 1977 and 2004, among the candidates were 100 lieutenant governors (28 won), 83 attorneys general (21 won), 27 secretaries of state (seven won), 22 state treasurers (six won) and 14 state auditors, auditors general or comptrollers (three won). Looking at these numbers from a bettor’s point of view, the odds of a lieutenant governor winning were 3.6-to-1, an attorney general 4.0-to-1, a secretary of state 3.9-to-1, a state treasurer 3.7-to-1 and a state auditor 4.7-to-1. One other unique aspect about the current governors is that there will be eight women serving as governor in 2005 – one less than the nine women serving as governor in the last half of 2004 which was the all-time high for women serving at one time in the office. Seven are women were elected in their own right: Janet Napolitano (D-Ariz.), Ruth Ann Minner (D-Del.), Linda Lingle (R-Hawaii), Kathleen Sebelius (D-Kan.), Kathleen Blanco (D-La.), Jennifer Granholm (D-Mich.) and Christine Gregoire

(D-Wash.), and one is the “accidental governor” of Connecticut, M. Jodi Rell who became governor upon the resignation of Gov. John Rowland. While gubernatorial politics continues to be volatile, women are also continuing to hold their own in these races. In the 2001-2004 gubernatorial races, seven out of the 12 women running either as the incumbent or as the candidate of a major party won – a 58 percent success rate. There will be more soon.

Timing of Gubernatorial Elections

The election cycle for governors has settled into a regular pattern. Over the past few decades, many states have moved their elections to the off-presidential years in order to decouple the state and national level campaigns. Now, only 11 states hold their gubernatorial elections in the same year as a presidential election. Two of these states— New Hampshire and Vermont—still have two-year terms for their governor so their elections alternate between presidential and non-presidential years. As can be seen in Table A, the year following a presidential election has only two states with gubernatorial elections.3 Then in the even years between presidential elections, 36 states hold their gubernatorial elections, and in the year before a presidential election, three Southern states hold their gubernatorial elections.4

Cost of Gubernatorial Elections Table C presents data on the costs of the most recent elections. There is a great range in how much these races cost, from the all-time most expensive race recorded in New York in 2002 ($155.8 million in 2004 dollars) to the 2002 race in Nebraska ($1,697,424 in 2004 dollars). Both the New York and the Nebraska races saw an incumbent successfully win re-election. But if we look at how much was spent by all the candidates per general election vote, a slightly different picture evolves. In 2003, the Louisiana The Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS

Table C: Costs of Gubernatorial Campaigns, Most Recent Elections 2000–2003 Total campaign expenditures Winner Cost Per Vote (2004$)

Spent (2004$)

State

Year

Winner

Point margin

All Candidates (2004$)

Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California

2002 2002 2002 2002 2002

R★★★ R# D# R★ D★

+0.3 +15 +1 +6 +4.9

$33,512,464 5,672,033 8,085,414 4,790,362 116,314,901

24.51 25.01 6.59 5.94 15.56

$14,700,611 1,835,582 2,439,470 2,898,362 68,169,007

43.9 32.4 30.2 60.5 58.6

49.2 55.9 46.2 53.0 47.3

Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia

2002 2002 2000 2002 2002

R★ R★ D# R# R★★★

+29 +12 +19 +13 +5

6,426,516 8,353,753 3,437,090 18,216,101 25,752,306

4.55 8.17 10.62 3.57 12.70

5,116,110 6,493,702 1,483,384 8,094,338 3,880,257

79.6 77.7 43.2 44.4 15.1

62.6 56.1 59.2 56.0 51.4

Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa

2002 2002 2002 2000 2002

R# R★ D# D★ D★

+4 +14 +8 +14 +8

10,041,642 2,374,205 51,768,316 20,017,471 13,958,685

26.28 5.77 14.63 9.19 13.61

5,741,536 1,181,847 23,789,347 10,707,268 6,424,202

57.2 49.8 46.0 53.5 46.0

51.1 56.3 52.2 56.6 52.7

Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland

2002 2003 2003 2002 2002

D# R# D# D# R#

+8 +10 +3.8 +5.6 +3.9

16,201,626 11,872,641 40,427,109 4,595,672 5,452,542

19.39 10.96 28.72 9.10 3.20

4,631,042 5,917,266 6,871,733 1,681,932 2,689,846

28.6 49.8 17.0 36.6 49.3

52.9 55.0 51.9 47.1 51.6

Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri

2002 2002 2002 2003 2000

R# D★★★ R# R★★★ D#

+5 +4 +8 +7 +1

32,486,102 15,341,679 6,334,174 20,326,276 20,765,277

14.63 4.83 2.81 22.72 9.09

9,937,370 9,435,558 2,681,285 11,721,105 11,055,690

30.6 61.5 42.3 57.7 53.2

49.8 51.4 44.4 52.6 50.5

Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey

2000 2002 2002 2002 2001

R# R★ R★ R# D#

+4 +41 +46 +21 +15

5,109,476 1,697,424 2,883,964 20,113,947 39,452,688

12.46 3.53 5.72 45.41 17.71

1,069,605 1,287,850 2,806,829 11,851,771 16,414,420

20.9 75.9 97.3 58.9 41.6

51.0 68.7 68.1 58.6 56.4

New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio

2002 2002 2000 2000 2002

D# R★ D# R# R★

+15 +16 +6 +10 +20

10,639,323 155,787,222 31,241,242 2,560,649 15,362,890

21.97 33.21 10.62 8.82 4.76

7,777,598 46,909,872 12,217,327 1,245,918 13,623,911

73.1 30.1 39.1 48.7 88.7

55.5 48.2 52.0 55.0 57.8

Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina

2002 2002 2002 2002 2002

D# D# D# R# R★★★

+0.7 +2.8 +9 +10 +6

11,912,260 16,041,053 69,151,599 7,350,029 31,432,056

11.50 12.73 19.31 22.15 28.58

3,430,690 4,424,201 41,574,906 2,592,029 7,597,776

28.8 27.6 60.1 35.3 24.2

43.3 49.0 53.4 54.8 52.8

South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont

2002 2002 2002 2000 2002

R# D# R★ R★ R#

+15 +3 +18 +14 +2.5

9,833,246 18,255,080 112,055,236 2,416,186 2,250,068

29.39 11.04 24.61 3.17 9.78

1,724,149 10,364,483 29,617,542 2,161,125 1,193,757

17.5 56.8 26.4 89.5 53.1

56.8 50.6 57.8 55.8 44.9

Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming

2001 2000 2000 2002 2002

D# D★ D★★★ D★★★ D#

+5 +19 +3 +3.7 +2.1

36,491,411 7,277,630 7,234,887 18,158,028 2,735,552

19.34 2.95 11.16 10.23 14.75

21,555,447 4,194,591 3,120,473 5,866,573 781,845

59.1 57.6 43.1 32.3 29.0

52.2 58.4 50.1 45.1 50.0

Source: Thad Beyle. Note: 2004$—Using the November 2004 CPI Index which was 1.910 of the 1982-84 Index = 1,000, the actual 2000 expenditures were based on a 1.722 value or .901 of the 2004$ index, the actual 2001 expenditures were based on a 1.771 index value or .927 of the 2004$ index, the actual 2002 expenditures were based on a 1.799 index value or .942 of the 2004$ index, and the 2003 expenditures were based on a 1.840 index value or .963 of the 2004$ index. Then the actual expenditures of each state’s governor’s race were divided by the .9 value for that year to get the equivalent 2004$ value of those expenditures.

196

The Book of the States 2005

Percent of all expenditures

Key: ★—Incumbent ran and won. D—Democrat ★★—Incumbent ran and lost in party primary. I—Independent ★★★—Incumbent ran and lost in general election. R—Republican # —Open seat.

Vote percent


GOVERNORS

Table D: Women Governors Governor

State

Year elected or succeeded How woman to office became governor

Tenure of service

Last elected Previous position held offices held before governorship

Phase I - From initial statehood to adoption of the 19th Amendment to U.S. Constitution No women elected or served as governor Phase II - Wives of former governors elected governor, 1924-1966 Nellie Tayloe Ross (D) Wyoming 1924 Miriam “Ma” Ferguson (D) Texas 1924

E E

Lurleen Wallace (D)

Alabama

1966

Phase III - Women who became governor on their own merit, 1970 to date Ella Grasso (D) Connecticut 1974 Dixy Lee Ray (D) Washington 1976 Vesta M. Roy (R) New Hampshire1982 Martha Layne Collins (D) Kentucky 1983 Madeleine M. Kunin (D) Vermont 1984 Kay A. Orr (R) Nebraska 1986 Rose Mofford (D) Arizona 1988 Joan Finney (D) Kansas 1990 Barbara Roberts (D) Oregon 1990 Ann Richards (D) Texas 1990 Christy Whitman (R) New Jersey 1993 Jeanne Shaheen (D) New Hampshire1996 Jane Dee Hull (R) Arizona 1997 Nancy P. Hollister (R) Ohio 1998 Ruth Ann Minner (D) Delaware 2000 Judy Martz (R) Montana 2000 Sila Calderon (Pop D) Puerto Rico 2000 Jane Swift (R) Massachusetts 2001 Janet Napolitano (D) Arizona 2002 Linda Lingle (R) Hawaii 2002 Kathleen Sebelius (D) Kansas 2002 Jennifer Granholm (D) Michigan 2002 Olene Walker (R) Utah 2003 Kathleen Blanco (D) Louisiana 2003 M. Jodi Rell (R) Connecticut 2004 Christine Gregoire (D) Washington 2004 Sources: National Governors Association Web site, www.nga.org, and individual state government Web sites. Key: S—Succeeded to office upon death, resignation or removal of the incumbent governor. C—City council or county commission. SH—State house member. E—Elected governor. SOS—Secretary of state F—Former first lady. SS—State senate. LG—Lieutenant governor. T—State treasurer. M—Mayor. (a) Congresswoman. (b) Ray served on the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission from 1972-1975 and was chair of the AEC from 1973-1975. (c) Roy as state senate president succeeded to office upon the death of Gov. Hugh Gallen. (d) State senate president. (e) State supreme court clerk. (f) Mofford as secretary of state became acting governor in February 1988 and governor in April 1988 upon the impeachment and removal of Gov. Evan Mecham.

governor’s race was the most expensive at $28.72 per vote, followed by the Mississippi race at $22.72 per vote, and the Kentucky race at $10.96 per vote. The Kentucky and Louisiana races were for an open seat, while the Mississippi race saw an incumbent governor defeated in his bid for reelection to a second term. The most expensive governor’s race per vote in the 2000-2003 cycle was in the New Hampshire 2002 race when the candidates spent $45.41 per vote in 2004 dollars. The least expensive race during the same

F F

... ...

E

1/1925-1/1927 1/1925-1/1927 1/1933-1/1935 1/1967-5/1968

F

...

E E S (c) E E E S (f) E E E E E S (i) S (k) E E E S (l) E E E E S (q) E S (r) E

1/1975-12/1980 1/1977-1/1981 12/1982-1/1983 12/1983-12/1987 1/1985-1/1991 1/1987-1/1991 4/1988-1/1991 1/1991-1/1995 1/1991-1/1995 1/1991-1/1995 1/1994-1/2001 1/1997-1/2003 9/1997-1/2003 12/1998-1/1999 1/20011/2001-1/2005 1/2001-1/2005 4/2001-1/2003 1/200312/20021/20031/200311/2003-1/2005 1/20047/20041/2005-

SH, SOS, (a) (b) (d) (e), LG SH, LG T SOS T (g), C, SH, SOS C, T (h) (d) (j), SOS LG SH, SS, LG LG M SS, LG (m), AG C, M (n) SH, (o) (p), AG SH, LG SH, LG SH, LG AG

(a) ... (d) LG LG T SOS T SOS T (h) (d) SOS LG LG LG M LG AG M (o) AG LG LG LG AG

(g) Local school board member. (h) Whitman was a former state utilities official. (i) Hull as secretary of state became acting governor when Gov. Fife Symington resigned. Elected to full term in 1998. (j) Speaker of the state house. (k) Hollister as lieutenant governor became governor when Gov. George Voinovich stepped down to serve in the U.S. Senate. (l) Swift as lieutenant governor succeeded Gov. Paul Celluci who resigned after being appointed ambassador to Canada. Was the first governor to give birth while serving in office. (m) U.S. attorney. (n) Lingle was mayor of Maui for two terms, elected in 1990 and 1996. (o) Insurance commissioner. (p) Federeal prosecutor. (q) Walker as lieutenant governor succeeded to the governorship upon the resignation of Gov. Mike Leavitt in 2003, who had been appointed administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. (r) Rell as lieutenant governor succeeded to the governorship upon the resignation of Gov. John Rowland in 2004.

cycle was in the Minnesota 2002 race when the candidates spent only $2.81 per vote. In Figure A, by converting the actual dollars spent each year into the equivalent 2004 dollars, we see how the cost of these elections has increased over time. Since 1981, we have been able to compare the costs of each four-year cycle of elections with the previous cycle of elections. In the 54 elections held between 1977 and 1980, the total expenditures were $507.8 million in The Council of State Governments

197


GOVERNORS

Table E: Impeachments and Removals of Governors Name, party and state

Year

Process of impeachment and outcome

Charles Robinson (R-Kan.)

1862

Impeached

Acquitted

Harrison Reed (R-Fla.)

1868

Impeached

Acquitted

William Holden (R-N.C.)

1870

Impeached

Convicted

Powell Clayton (R-Ark.)

1871

Impeached

Acquitted Convicted

David Butler (R-Neb.)

1871

Impeached

Henry Warmouth (R-La.)

1872

Impeached

Harrison Reed (R-Fla.)

1872

Impeached

Adelbert Ames (R-Miss.)

1876

Impeached

William P. Kellogg (R-La.)

1876

Impeached

Removed Removed Term ended

Acquitted Resigned Acquitted

Wiliam Sulzer (D-N.Y.)

1913

Impeached

Convicted

Removed

James “Pa” Ferguson (D-Texas)

1917

Impeached

Convicted

Resigned Removed

John C. Walton (D-Okla.)

1923

Impeached

Convicted

Henry S. Johnston (D-Okla.)

1928

Impeached

Acquitted

Henry S. Johnston (D-Okla.)

1929

Impeached

Convicted

Huey P. Long (D-La.)

1929

Impeached

Acquitted

Removed

Henry Horton (D-Tenn.)

1931

Impeached

Acquitted

Richard Leche (D-La.)

1939

Threatened

Evan Mecham (R-Ariz.)

1988

Impeached

John Rowland (R-Conn.)

2004

Threatened

John A. Quitman (D-Miss.)

1851

Resigned after federal criminal indictment.

Lynn J. Frazier (R-N.D.)

1921

Recalled by voters during third term.

Warren T. McCray (R-Ind.)

1924

Resigned after federal criminal conviction.

William Langer (I-N.D.)

1934

Removed by North Dakota Supreme Court.

Thomas L. Moodie (D-N.D.)

1935

Removed by North Dakota Supreme Court.

J. Howard Pyle (R-Ariz.)

1955

Recall petition certified, but term ended before date set for recall election.

Marvin Mandel (D-Md.)

1977

Removed after federal criminal conviction.

Ray Blanton (D-Tenn.)

1979

Term shortened in bi-partisan agreement (a)

Evan Mecham (R-Ariz.)

1987

Recall petition certified, but impeached, convicted and removed from office before the date set for the recall election.

Resigned Convicted

Removed Resigned

Other removals of incumbent governors

H. Guy Hunt (R-Ala.)

1993

Removed after state criminal conviction.

Jim Guy Tucker Jr. (D-Ark.)

1996

Resigned after federal criminal conviction.

J. Fife Symington (R-Ariz.)

1997

Resigned after federal criminal conviction.

Gray Davis (D-Calif.)

2003

Recalled by voters during second term.

James McGreevey (D-N.J.)

2004

Resigned due to personal reasons.

Sources: Thad Beyle and The Council of State Governments. Key: (a) See Lamar Alexander, Steps Along the War: A Governor’s Scrap-

equivalent 2004 dollars. In the 53 elections held between 2000 and 2003—just over two decades later - the total expenditures were over $1,148 million in 2004 dollars, an increase of 126 percent. The greatest increases in expenditures were between the 19771980 and the 1987–1990 cycles, when there was a 43.9 percent increase, and between the 1992–1995 and the 2000–2003 cycles when there was a 60.9 percent increase. These increases reflect the new style of campaigning for governor—with the candidates developing their own personal party by using outside consult198

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book (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1986), 21-9 for a discussion of this unique transition between governors.

ants, opinion polls, media ads and buys, and extensive fundraising efforts to pay for all of this. This style has now reached into most every state. Few states will be surprised by a high-price, high-tech campaign; they are commonplace now. The “air-war” campaigns have replaced the “ground-war” campaigns across the states. Another factor has been the increasing number of candidates who are either wealthy or who have access to wealth and are willing to spend some of this money to become governor. For some, spending a lot of money leads to winning the governor’s chair.


GOVERNORS In 2002, Gov. Gray Davis spent $68.2 million in 2004 dollars in his successful bid for reelection in California, while Gov. George Pataki spent $46.9 million in 2004 dollars to win his third term. However, spending that amount of money and winning reelection did not deter those wanting to have Gov. Davis recalled from office less than a year later. But spending a lot doesn’t always lead to a win. For example, in the 2002 New York election, Thomas Golisano spent $81 million in 2004 dollars in his unsuccessful campaign for governor as an Independent candidate. And in Texas, Tony Sanchez also spent $81 million in 2004 dollars as the unsuccessful Democratic candidate. In California’s 1998 gubernatorial election, three candidates spent $126 million in 2004 dollars in their campaigns. Two of these candidates won their party’s nomination and faced off in November, with Gray Davis (D) at $43.9 million in 2004 dollars the winner over Republican candidate Dan Lundgren at $36.8 million in 2004 dollars. The largest spender at $45.4 million in 2004 dollars, Al Checci (D), wasn’t even able to win the Democratic nomination.

A Shift Toward More Women Governors As already noted, a unique aspect about the current governors is that there are eight women serving as governor in 2005. A little history helps to put this into perspective. There have been three phases in this history. In the first phase, which lasted until 1924, no woman was ever elected governor of any state. Remember, the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution providing nationwide suffrage to women was only ratified in August 1920. (see Table D) The second phase began in 1924, when the first two women were elected governors in the states of Texas and Wyoming—and both were the wives of former governors. Although both were elected on the same day, Wyoming’s Nellie Tayloe Ross became the first woman governor to be sworn in—one week before “Ma” Ferguson in Texas took office. It wouldn’t be until 1966 when outgoing Gov. George Wallace was instrumental in getting his wife Lurleen elected to succeed him that another woman was elected governor. The key to these wins was that they were wives of former and well-known governors. The third phase began in the 1970s when women politicians began to move up the political ladder and win the governor’s chair in their own right. This began with Ella Grasso of Connecticut (1974) as she moved up from serving several terms as secretary of state and then as a U.S. congresswoman. In effect, she was the first woman governor to win the office on her own merit. There was one other woman elected

governor in the 1970s on her own merit – Dixy Lee Ray of Washington, then came three in the 1980s and four in the 1990s. Four other women became governor in the 1980–1999 period when as number two in the line of succession they succeeded to the office upon the death, resignation or removal of the incumbent governor. In the first decade of the 21st century, we have seen 12 women become governor in the 50 states and Puerto Rico. In the 2000 elections, three women were elected governor—Ruth Ann Minner (D-Del.), Judy Martz (R-Mont.) and Sila Caldron (Pop. DPR). In the 2002 elections, four women were elected governor—Janet Napolitano (D-Ariz.), Linda Lingle, (R-Hawaii), Kathleen Sebelius (DKan.) and Jennifer Granholm (D-Mich.). In the 2003 elections, Kathleen Blanco (D-La.) was elected governor and two other women moved up from lieutenant governor to governor when President Bush appointed their state’s governor to a position in the Bush administration—Jane Swift (RMass.) in 2001 and Olene Walker (R-Utah) in 2003. In 2004, another woman Christine Gregoire (DWashington) was elected governor and another woman lieutenant governor moved up to become governor upon the resignation of the incumbent governor—M. Jodi Rell (R-Conn.). The last stepping stone to the governorship was as lieutenant governor for six of them, as attorney general for three others, mayor of a major city for two others, and as insurance commissioner for one other. And each had held other elected and appointed offices en route.

Gubernatorial Forced Exits The California 2003 gubernatorial recall and replacement votes highlighted the fact that some elected governors faced situations in which they could lose their office without being beaten by a challenger at the ballot box, becoming ill or dying. (see Table E) Between 1851 and 2004, 30 governors have faced the prospect of having to leave office through impeachment, removal or resignation due to a criminal conviction or actions that brought them into serious trouble. Sixteen governors have been impeached by the state house and while eight were acquitted of the charges by the state senate, seven were convicted by their state senates. Of these seven losers in the fight, six were then removed from office and one resigned upon his conviction.5 Harrison Reed (R-Fla.) was impeached twice but acquitted both times in 1868 and 1873. Henry Johnson (DOkla.) was also impeached twice and while he beat The Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS peached governor resigned before there could be a trial by the senate.7 And two other governors resigned in the face of a Specific Scores Percent power 1960 2005 change threatened impeachment effort.8 Separately elected Thirteen governors faced other means executive branch officials (SEP) 2.3 2.9 28% of being forced to leave office. Five were Tenure potential (TP) 3.2 4.1 28 convicted of criminal charges with three Appointment powers (AP) 2.9 3.1 7 resigning after the conviction9 and two Budget power (BP) 3.6 3.1 -14 being removed after their conviction.10 Veto power (VP) 2.8 4.5 61 One other governor resigned after a Gubernatorial party control (PC) 3.6 3.0 -17 criminal indictment was made.11 Two Totals 18.4 20.7 12.5 North Dakota governors were removed Notes: by the state Supreme Court as one was SEP - Separately elected executive branch officials: 5 = only governor or governor/ charged with conspiracy in raising money lieutenant governor team elected; 4.5 = governor or governor/lieutenant governor team, with one other elected official; 4 = governor/lieutenant governor team with for his political party by trying to get 5 some process officials (attorney general, secretary of state, treasurer, auditor) elected; percent of the wages of the people he had 3 = governor/lieutenant governor team with process officials, and some major and minor policy officials elected; 2.5 = governor (no team) with six or fewer officials appointed for a subscription to a new elected, but none are major policy officials; 2 = governor (no team) with six or fewer party newspaper—the court suspended officials elected, including one major policy official; 1.5 = governor (no team) with six or fewer officials elected, but two are major policy officials; 1 = governor (no him from office.12 The other was disteam) with seven or more process and several major policy officials elected. [Source: qualified from office as he had voted in CSG, The Book of the States, 1960-1961 (1960): 124-125 and (2004): 175-180]. TP - Tenure potential of governors: 5 = 4-year term, no restraint on reelection; 4.5 Minnesota in 1930 which was within the = 4-year term, only three terms permitted; 4 = 4-year term, only two terms permitted; last five years prior to his election as gov3 = 4-year term, no consecutive election permitted; 2 = 2-year term, no restraint on reelection; 1 = 2-year term, only two terms permitted. [Source: Joseph A. Schlesinger, ernor which was not allowed under the “The Politics of the Executive,” in Politics in the American States, edited by Herbert state’s laws.13 Four others have faced a Jacob and Kenneth N. Vines (Boston: Little, Brown, 1965) and CSG, The Book of the States, 2004 (2004): 157-158]. recall initiative and while Gov. Lynn AP - Governor’s appointment powers in six major functional areas: corrections, KFrazier (R-N.D., 1921) and Gov. Gray 12 education, health, highways/transportation, public utilities regulation, and welfare. The six individual office scores are totaled and then averaged and rounded to the nearDavis (D-Calif., 2003) were recalled by est .5 for the state score. 5 = governor appoints, no other approval needed; 4 = governor the voters, Gov. Evan Mecham (R-Ariz., appoints, a board, council or legislature approves; 3 = someone else appoints, governor approves or shares appointment; 2 = someone else appoints, governor and others ap1988) was impeached, convicted and reprove; 1 = someone else appoints, no approval or confirmation needed. [Source: moved from office by the state legislaSchlesinger (1965), and CSG, The Book of the States, 2004 (2004): 175-180]. BP - Governor’s budget power: 5 = governor has full responsibility, legislature ture before the scheduled recall vote may not increase executive budget; 4 = governor has full responsibility, legislature could be held, and Gov. Howard Pyle (Rcan increase by special majority vote or subject to item veto; 3 = governor has full responsibility, legislature has unlimited power to change executive budget; 2 = govAriz., 1955) saw his term end before a ernor shares responsibility, legislature has unlimited power to change executive budrecall vote could be held. In an interestget; 1 = governor shares responsibility with other elected official, legislature has unlimited power to change executive budget. [Source: Schlesinger (1965) and CSG, ing twist on how an incumbent’s tenure The Book of the States, 2004 (2004): 162-163 and NCSL, “Limits on Authority of was shortened, Gov. Ray Blanton (DLegislature to Change Budget” (1998). VP - Governor’s veto power: 5 = has item veto and a special majority vote of the Tenn., 1979) found his term shortened legislature is needed to override a veto (3/5’s of legislators elected or 2/3’s of legislaand the locks to his gubernatorial office tors present; 4 = has item veto with a majority of the legislators elected needed to override; 3 = has item veto with only a majority of the legislators present needed to changed to keep him out in a bi-partisan override; 2 = no item veto, with a special legislative majority needed to override it; 1 = agreement tied to illegal actions he was no item veto, only a simple legislative majority needed to override. (Source: Schlesinger (1965):, and CSG, The Book of the States, 2004 (2004): 113-115, 162-163). taking at the end of his term.14 PC - Gubernatorial party control: 5 = has a substantial majority (75% or more) in Much of this gubernatorial turmoil ocboth houses of the legislature; 4 = has a simple majority in both houses (less than 75%), or a substantial majority in one house and a simple majority in the other; 3 = curred to 18 governors in nine different split party control in the legislature or a nonpartisan legislature; 2 = has a substantial southern states. The leading individual minority in both houses (25% or more), or a simple minority (25% or less) in one and a substantial minority in the other; 1 = has a simple minority in both houses. (Source: states in experiencing the removal of the National Conference of State Legislatures web page, various dates). incumbent efforts were Arizona and LouiTotal - sum of the scores on the six individual indices. Score - total divided by six to keep 5-point scale. siana with four such actions each, North Dakota and Oklahoma with three such actions each, and Arkansas, Florida, Misthe charges in the 1928 effort, he lost the fight and sissippi and Tennessee with two such actions each. With was removed in the 1929 effort. Another impeached nearly one-third of these actions occurring within the governor escaped conviction as his term ended be- last three decades, there is heightened awareness of these fore the senate could take action6 while another im- options of gaining a new governor.

Table F: Governors’ Institutional Powers, 1960 v. 2005

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Gubernatorial Powers One way to view the changes that have been occurring in gubernatorial powers is to look at the Index of Formal Powers of the Governorship first developed by Joseph Schlesinger in the 1960s,15which this author has continued to update.16 The index used here consists of six different indices of gubernatorial power as seen in 1960 and 2005. These indices include the number and importance of separately elected executive branch officials, the tenure potential of governors, the appointment powers of governors for administrative and board positions in the executive branch, the governor ’s budgetary power, the governor’s veto power and the governor’s party control in the legislature. Each of the individual indices is set in a five-point scale, with five being the most power and one being the least. (See Table F for details on how each of these indices and the overall index were developed.) During the four and a half decades between 1960 and 2005, the overall institutional powers of the of the nation’s governors increased by 12.5 percent. The greatest increase among the individual gubernatorial powers was in their veto power (plus 61 percent) as more governors gained an item veto, and in 1996 North Carolina voters were finally able to vote on a constitutional amendment giving their governor veto power. It was approved by a 3-to-1 ratio. The indices measuring the governor’s tenure potential (length of term and ability to seek an additional term or terms) and the number of separately elected executive branch officials showed identical 28 percent increases in favor of the governor. The governors’ appointment power over specific functional area executive branch officials increased by only 7 percent. In addition, the states continue to hold to the concept of the multiple executive in terms of how many statewide elected officials there are. In 2004, there were 308 separately elected executive officials covering 12 major offices in the states.17 This compares to 306 elected officials in 1972. Ten states also have multimember boards, commissions or councils with members selected by statewide or district election. The gubernatorial budgetary power actually declined over the period (minus 14 percent). However, we must remember that during this same period, state legislatures were also undergoing considerable reform, and gaining more power to work on the governor’s proposed budget was one of those reforms sought. Hence, the increased legislative budgetary power more than balanced out any increases in gubernatorial budgetary power. There has also been a drop in the gubernatorial party control in the state legislatures over the period (mi-

nus 17 percent). Much of this can be attributed to the major partisan shifts occurring in the Southern states as the region has been moving from one-party dominance to a very competitive two-party system.18 In 1960, 13 of the 14 governors were Democrats, and all 28 state legislative chambers were under Democratic control. In 2005, Republicans control eight governorships to the Democrats six, while the Democrats hold a 15-to-13 edge in control of the legislative chambers. Four Southern governors face a legislature completely controlled by the opposite party,19 while three others face a legislature with split partisan control.20 Notes 1 The former governors winning the presidency over the past three decades were Jimmy Carter (D-Ga., 1971-1975) in 1976, Ronald Reagan (R-Calif., 1967-1975) in 1980 and 1984, Bill Clinton (D-Ark., 1979-1981 and 1983-1992) in 1992 and 1996, and George W. Bush (R-Texas, 1995-2001) in 2000 and 2004. 2 For an analysis of governors trying to handle the impact of the early 1990s economic downturn, see Thad Beyle, ed., Governors in Hard Times (Washington, D.C.: CQ Press, 1994). 3 New Jersey and Virginia. 4 Kentucky, Louisiana and Mississippi. 5 James “Pa” Ferguson of Texas in 1917. 6 Henry Warmouth (R-La.), 1872 7 Adelbert Ames (R-Ms.), 1876. 8 Richard Leche (D-La.), 1939 and John Rowland (RConn.), 2004. 9 Warren McCray (R-Ind.), 1924, Jim Guy Tucker, Jr. (D-Ark.), 1993 and J. Fife Symington (R-Ariz.), 1997. 10 Marvin Mandel (D-Md.), 1977 and H. Guy Hunt (RAla.), 1993. 11 John A. Quitman (D-Miss.), 1851. 12 William Langer (D-ND), 1934. 13 Thomas Moodie (D-ND), 1935. 14 See Lamar Alexander, Steps Along the Way: A Governor’s Scrapbook (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, 1986), 21-29 for a discussion of this unique transition between governors. 15 Joseph A. Schlesinger, “The Politics of the Executive,” Politics in the American States, 1st and 2nd ed, Herbert Jacob and Kenneth N. Vines, eds., (Boston: Little Brown, 1965 and 1971). 16 Thad L. Beyle, “The Governors,” Politics in the American States 8th ed., Virginia Gray and Russell L. Hanson, eds., (Washington, D.C.: CQ Press, 2003). Earlier versions of this index by the author appeared in the 4th edition (1983), the 5th edition (1990), the 6th edition (1996), and the 7th edition (1999). 17 Kendra Hovey and Harold Hovey, “D-12 - Number of Statewide Elected Officials, 2004,” CQ’s State Fact Finder, 2005 (Washington, D.C.: CQ Press, 2005): 113. 18 The following states are included in this definition of the South: Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky,

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GOVERNORS Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia. 19 Republicans Bob Riley in Ala., Mike Huckabee in Ark. and Haley Barbour in Miss., and Democrat Mark Warner in Va. 20 Republican Ernie Fletcher in Ky., and Democrats Brad Henry in Okla. and Phil Bredesen in Tenn.

About the Author Thad Beyle is Pearsall Professor of Political Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. A Syracuse University AB and AM, he received his Ph.D. at the University of Illinois. He spent a year in the North Carolina governor’s office in the mid-1960s and has worked with the National Governors Association in several capacities on gubernatorial transitions.

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Staffing the Governor’s Office: A Comparative Analysis By Patrick Fisher and David Nice The amount of staff support assigned to the governor’s office varies considerably from state to state. Staffing levels tend to be higher in states where the scope and complexity of work facing state government is greater and in states where the Progressive Era reforms to foster direct democracy have not been adopted.

Introduction A striking development in American politics since World War II is the growth of staff support for elected officials. Staff support for presidents, Congress, governors and state legislatures has increased dramatically, with gubernatorial staffing roughly quintupling from the mid-1950s to the mid-1990s.1 The growth of staffing at the state level has been very uneven, however; the following analysis will seek to explain variations in gubernatorial staffing in the American states. A variety of forces have contributed to the creation of large staff systems, including the growth and increasing complexity of governmental responsibilities, a belief that elected officials need the guidance of wise advisors, mistrust of the bureaucracy, public relations needs, officials’ inclinations to keep together the team of people that have helped them in the past (in the last election campaign, for example), and officials’ desire to have people who can serve as buffers and gatekeepers to absorb the anger of the public, regulate access to the officials, and take the blame for mistakes an failures.2 Large staff systems present a number of potential risks. Many critics have expressed concern over the prospect of unelected, largely invisible people exerting significant influence over public programs. An elected official may not be able to monitor the activities of a large staff very effectively, with the result that staffers pursue their own agendas. Staff members hired to help an elected official cope with a heavy workload may, by generating new proposals an added information, make the workload heavier. A large staff organization, created in part to compensate for the inadequacies of the bureaucracy, may come to display some of the same pathologies as the bureaucracy. Finally, in an era of limited resources and public cynicism about government, the cost of a large staff system may become a point of controversy, a consideration that contributed to reductions in congressional committee staffs in 1995 and reductions in and reluctance to expand legislative staffing in

some states.3 A large staff, then, presents a number of significant risks and costs which must be weighed against the possible benefits. In an era of increasing governmental responsibilities at the state level, gubernatorial staffs play an important role in many aspects of government. Governors’ staffs are involved in public relations activities, legislative liaison, budgetary analysis, monitoring agency behavior and policy analysis.4 Without adequate staff support, governors may be heavily dependent on information provided by interest groups, state agencies, and other outside sources whose interests may be very different for the governors’. Governors need staff assistance to draft proposals, analyze legislation that the governor may not have time to evaluate personally and assess programs being administered by state agencies. The important role played by gubernatorial staffs implies that levels of staff support may have important implications for governors and for state policymaking. A governor with ample staff assistance is likely to be better equipped to face new demands and problems, while a limited staff may be overwhelmed by a rush of new concerns. Levels of staffing may also cast light on the political dynamics that encourage or discourage giving governors substantial staff assistance. We now turn to an examination of factors that influence gubernatorial staffing levels.

Possible Influences on Gubernatorial Staffing A number of factors may help to shape whether a governor has abundant staff support or relatively limited staffing. Among the most likely influences on staffing are orientations toward government, the socioeconomic environment, the governor’s formal power, and the task environment facing the governor’s office. We will examine each of those factors in turn. Orientations toward government influence many aspects of state politics.5 Two different orientations affect gubernatorial staffing levels. First, ideology The Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS is likely to affect staffing. Generally speaking, liberals tend to be more supportive of governmental activism, and conservatives prefer more limited government.6 A conservative ideological environment is likely to yield lower levels of staffing, both by providing a less supportive environment for new initiatives and by making revenue-raising more difficult. By contrast, a more liberal environment may yield more new initiatives, which will mean more work for staffers, an make revenue raising easier, which will make funding a large staff system easier. A second aspect of orientations toward government is the Progressive tradition of direct democracy. In the late 1800s and early 1900s, many states adopted initiative and referendum provisions to enable citizens to bypass public officials and control policy directly. Those actions were prompted in part by mistrust of public officials and the belief that they would not respond to the needs or desires of ordinary citizens.7 If those beliefs have persisted, then states that have adopted direct democracy provisions should, by virtue of a climate of mistrust of politicians, have lower levels of gubernatorial staffing. The socioeconomic environment may also influence gubernatorial staffing, just as that environment affects many other aspects of state politics.8 Two aspects of that environment, metropolitanization and affluence, are likely to be particularly relevant for staffing levels. Historically speaking, metropolitan interests have often found governors to be more responsive than state legislatures to metropolitan concerns, although that tendency may be less pronounced since the reapportionment cases of the 1960s.9 In addition, the greater complexity and diversity of metropolitan areas, coupled with the weaker social controls and impersonal encounters common in urban life, make metropolitan areas a source of many demands of government generally.10 As a result, more metropolitan states are likely to produce added demands on the governor’s office and a need for more staff support. Affluence is another important aspect of the socioeconomic environment that is likely to affect gubernatorial staffing. In a relatively poor state, all available financial resources are likely to be consumed by what are regarded as vital services. Ample staffing for the governor’s office is likely to seem a luxury that the state cannot afford in that context. By contrast, wealthier states can more readily generate financial resources for services and capabilities that go beyond the basic minimum.11 Raising the needed funds for financing a large staff system will be considerably easier in more prosperous states, 204

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other things being equal. The powers and responsibilities of governors are also likely to influence staffing levels. Just as the growth of the president’s role in governing the country has helped fuel the growth of presidential staff support, the increasing powers and duties of governors have created a need for more gubernatorial staff.12 Where governors play a larger role in the budget process, the legislative process, and in making personnel decisions, for example, they will need more staff support; clearly tasks of those types generate much of the staff work load.13 Where governors have more extensive powers and responsibilities, then, we expect to find larger gubernatorial staffs. Apart from a governor’s formal powers, the workload placed on the governor’s office is likely to affect the amount of staff support needed by the governor. Four significant aspects of that workload are likely to be federal aid, state-local spending, state population and the volume of legislation to be assessed. A major responsibility of all governors in the modern era is intergovernmental relations. The governors’ intergovernmental role takes many forms, from lobbying the federal government to participating in the administration of programs operated by more than one level of government to overseeing flows of intergovernmental grants.14 Clearly the expansion of intergovernmental responsibilities has encouraged staff expansion.15 States that receive proportionately more federal aid should, therefore, have a greater need for larger gubernatorial staffs. In a related vein, the larger the state population the higher the levels of state and local government spending, meaning more funds to monitor and, because of the temptations that immense sums of money can cause, a greater need for monitoring. A larger state population will generate more mail, e-mail and telephone calls to the governor’s office. Reaching out to a larger population will require more elaborate methods for managing public relations. A larger population, other things being equal, will include a greater variety of needs and viewpoints;16 making sense of those various needs and viewpoints will be easier with staff assistance. Moreover, when some viewpoints cannot be reconciled, the staff can sometimes serve as a buffer between the chief executives and disappointed citizens.17 Higher spending levels can also mean more agencies and programs to assess and analyze. Given that many governors have only modest interest or expertise in budgeting and fiscal administration, higher spending is likely to generate more work for the governor’s staff and, consequently, create pressures for more staffing. Not surprisingly,


GOVERNORS

Table A SIZE OF GOVERNOR’S STAFF IN THE 50 STATES State

Number of staff

Florida ................... Texas ...................... New York ............... New Jersey ............ Lousiana ................

310 266 180 156 143

Illinois .................... 130 Pennsylvania ........ 90 California .............. 86 Maryland .............. 82 Georgia .................. 77 North Carolina ..... Alaska .................... Massachusetts ...... Hawaii ................... Ohio .......................

76 70 70 67 60

Michigan ............... West Virginia ........ Arkansas ............... Rhode Island ........ Minnesota .............

56 56 55 49 45

Kentucky ............... Wisconsin .............. Arizona .................. Colorado ............... Missouri ................

40 40 39 39 39

Tennessee .............. Washington ........... Indiana .................. Oklahoma ............. Virginia .................

36 36 34 34 34

Mississippi ............ Delaware ............... Connecticut ........... Oregon ................... New Mexico ..........

33 32 30 29 27

then, states with larger populations are likely to have larger gubernatorial staffs.18 A third aspect of the workload is the volume of legislation introduced in a typical legislative session. Legislative proposals that originate in the governor’s office need staff support in formulating the proposals and in selling them to the legislature. Proposals that originate elsewhere also add to the staff’s workload, for the governor’s policy agenda must be defended against conflicting proposals.19 Where a larger volume of legislative proposals must be developed or assessed, a larger staff system will be needed.

Data and Methods

The staff in the 50 state governors’ offices ranges from a high of Idaho ...................... 24 310 in Florida to eight in Kansas ................... 24 New Hampshire .... 23 Wyoming (see Table A). South Dakota ........ 23 There are five other Alabama ................ 22 South Carolina ..... 22 states with staffs in triple Iowa ....................... 19 figures–Texas, New Maine ..................... 19 York, Louisiana and IlMontana ................ 18 Utah ....................... 18 linois–and one other North Dakota ....... 17 state with a staff in the Vermont ................ 14 single digits–Nebraska. New Hampshire .... 9 Wyoming ............... 8 A majority of the states Nevada ................... N.A. (35) fall into the range of Source: The Book of the States 19 to 77 staff in the 2004, 160. governor’s office with the average being 57 staffers. It is important to note that the definitions as to who are staff vary considerably across the states and that the figures for the states are the number of staffers as defined by the respective states. Because staffing levels are distributed in a relatively skewed manner, a log10 transformation was used to correct for skewing.

Table B STATE CHARACTERISTICS AND GUBERNATORIAL STAFFING: ZERO-ORDER CORRELATIONS Number of gubernatorial staffers Electoral conservatism Progressivism Percent metropolitan, 2000 Per capita income, 2000 Governor’s formal powers Federal aid per capita, 2000 State population, 2000 Bills introduced, 2003

.20 -.28 (a) .52 (b) .25 .03 -.25 .72 (c) .68 (c)

Source: Patrick Fisher and David Nice. Key: (a) .05 significance. (b) .01 significance. (c) .001 significance.

In order to measure ideology, we utilized the findings of Erikson, Wright and McIver which are based on public opinion survey data. It is the most direct measure available of how citizens regard themselves ideologically. The measure is also related to many state policy decisions.20 Progressivism is measured by a Guttman scale, with each state given one point for having some sort of initiative provision (whether direct or indirect) and one point for having some sort of referendum provision.21 The scale’s coefficient of reproducibility is .98. Data on metropolitanization, affluence, as measured by per capita income, and population are from Census sources. A square root transformation was used to correct for skewness in state population. The measure of the governor’s formal powers is based on the governor’s tenure potential, appointment powers, budgeting powers, legislative budget changing powers, veto powers, and political strength in the legislature.22 Data on federal grants per capita to each state and its localities and the volume of legislation introduced are from The Book of the States.23

Analysis The zero-order correlations between gubernatorial staffing levels and various state characteristics are consistent with some of the preceding hypotheses, but others receive little or no support (see Table B). We expected that states with more conservative electorates, as measured by Erikson, Wright and McIver would have smaller gubernatorial staffs, but this is not the case. In fact, more conservative states tend to have larger gubernatorial staffs, though this is not statistically significant. On the other hand, states with a strong Progressive legacy, as measured by the presence of initiative and referendum provisions, tend to The Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS Table C REGRESSION ANALYSIS OF GUBERNATORIAL STAFFING b Electoral conservatism Progressivism Percent metropolitan, 2000 Per capita income, 2000 Governor’s formal powers Federal aid per capita, 2000 State population, 2000 Bills introduced, 2003

-.013 -.078 .007 .001 .043 .040 .005 .357

beta -.036 -.211 .302 -.226 .054 .084 .487 .352

t -.318 -2.515(a) 2.24 (a) -1.67 .574 .874 4.34 (b) 3.33 (c)

Source: Patrick Fisher and David Nice. Note: r2 = .76 F = 15.23 (b) Key: (a) .05 significance. (b) .001 significance. (c) .01 significance.

have relatively small staffs for governor, as we hypothesized. The socioeconomic environment proves to be more consistent in its relationship with gubernatorial staffing. Staffs tend to be larger in more metropolitan states and in more affluent states, with the former tendency being particularly strong. By contrast, the formal powers of the governor are virtually unrelated to staffing levels. Finally, two of the three workload measures are strongly related to the size of the governor’s staff, with staffs tending to be larger in states with larger populations and more legislative activity. Federal aid per capita, however, actually displays a weak, negative relationship to staff levels. Regression analysis of gubernatorial staffing levels supports the contention that the greater the size and complexity of the workload facing state government, the larger the governor’s staff will tend to be (see Table C). Governors in states with large populations, high levels of metropolitization, and high levels of legislative activity are likely to confront a wide range of problems, issues, and demands on a recurring basis and are likely to need substantial staffs. The analysis also indicates that states where the Progressive movement left a more lasting imprint, as indicated by the presence of initiative and referendum provisions, tend to have smaller gubernatorial staffs, other things being equal. This is consistent with what we expected–states that have large staffs for governors were less receptive to Progressive reforms and their attendant suspicion of politicians. Despite our original expectations that states with relatively liberal climates of opinion, high per capita incomes, larger levels of federal aid, and governors with strong formal powers would also have larger 206

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gubernatorial staffs, these factors appear to be unrelated to gubernatorial staffing levels. As was the case with the zero-order correlations, ideology, affluence, federal aid and governor power were found to be essentially unrelated to gubernatorial staffing levels in the regression analysis. Overall the model is able to account for three-fourths of the total variation in staffing levels from state to state.

Discussion Critics of big government are inclined to depict government as expanding in a relatively mindless way, at least in the sense that expansion allegedly takes place without regard for the actual amount of work that needs to be done or public sentiments regarding what government needs to do. A large body of evidence indicates, however, that the scope of government is strongly influenced by the tasks facing government and public sentiment regarding what government should be doing.24 The results of this analysis are broadly consistent with the second perspective. Specifically, where governors must contend with the many demands of a larger population and the more difficult task of managing communications with a larger population, where state and local spending in higher, where a larger share of the population is concentrated in metropolitan areas and where there is more legislative activity, the governor cannot cope effectively without considerable staff support. A significant component of the Progressive movement was distrust of politicians, a sentiment that underlay proposals to create policy processes that could bypass politicians entirely. Reformers hoped that the initiative and referendum would enable citizens to make policy directly and without the meddling of party bosses and tools of special interest groups. Ironically, some of the reformers might be appalled by the role played by political consultants and interest groups in large-scale initiative and referendum campaigns in some states today. Where the Progressives’ direct democracy reforms, with their implicit distrust of politicians, have taken root, a large staff system appears somewhat out of place. The office of governor has changed dramatically in the last 100 years, with dramatic increases in the scope and complexity of gubernatorial responsibilities.25 In a similar fashion, state governments have become substantially more involved in a wide range of issues and programs during this century. Moreover, the job of governor does not promise to become any less demanding for the foreseeable future; if anything, the job will become more demanding in light of the revenue problems of many localities, efforts to


GOVERNORS devolve power away from the federal government, and the federal government’s seeming inability to make fundamental decisions on any number of issues. The result is likely to be even more demands on gubernatorial staff.

Notes 1 John Hart, The Presidential Branch (New York: Pergamon, 1987); Alan Rosenthal, Governors and Legislatures (Washington, DC: CQ Press, 1990), 46; Larry Sabato, Goodbye to Good-time Charlie (Washington, DC: CQ Press), 85; Thad Beyle, “Governors’ Offices: Variations on Common Themes,” in Being Governor, editors Thad Beyle and Lynn Muchmore (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 1983), 158-73. 2 Thomas Cronin, The State of the Presidency, 2nd edition (Boston: Little, Brown, 1980), 244-46; William Mullen and Paul Hagner, “The American Presidency,” in Chief Executives, editors Taketsugu Tsurutani and Jack Gabbert (Pullman, WA: Washington State University Press, 1992), 1-59; Hart (1987), 45-47. 3 Cronin (1980), 243-44; Edward H. Flentje, “Clarifying Purpose and Achieving Balance in Gubernatorial Administration,” Journal of State Government 62: 161-167; Alan Rosenthal, “The Legislature: Unraveling of Institutional Fabric,” in The State of the States, 3rd edition (Washington, DC: CQ Press, 1996), 134-37. 4 Donald Sprengel, “Trends in Staffing the Governor’s Office,” Comparative State Politics Newsletter 9: 11. 5 David Nice, Policy Innovation in State Government (Ames: Iowa State University Press, 1994); Robert Erikson, Gerald Wright and John McIver, Statehouse Democracy (New York: Cambridge, 1993). 6 Lyman Sargent, Contemporary Political Ideologies, 12th edition (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 2002). 7 Daniel Grant and Lloyd Omadahl, State and Local Government in America, 6th edition (Madison, WI: Brown and Benchmark, 1993); Thomas Cronin, Direct Democracy (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1989); Alpheus Mason and Gordon Baker, Free Government in the Making, 4th edition (New York: Oxford, 1985). 8 Thomas Dye, Politics in States and Communities (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 1996). 9 Charles Adrian and Michael Fine, State and Local Politics (Chicago: Lyceum Books/Nelson-Hall, 1991), 247.

10 John Bardo and John Hartman, Urban Sociology (Itasca, IL: Peacock, 1982), 101-102 and 129-30; Nice (1994), 26. 11 Nice (1994). 12 Cronin (1980), 244-46; Hart (1987), 45-6, and Beyle (1983), 162. 13 Adrian and Fine (1991), 250-51. 14 Thad Beyle, “Governors,” in Politics in the American States, 7th edition, editors Virginia Gray, Russell Hanson, and Herbert Jacob (Washington, DC: CQ Press, 1999), 23538; Adrian and Fine (1991), 255. 15 Beyle (1983), 162. 16 James Madison, “The Federalist Paper No. 10,” in The Federalist Papers, by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay (New York: Bantam, 1982). 17 Mullen and Hagner (1992), 31. 18 Coleman Ransone, The American Governorship (Westport, CT: Greenwood, 1982), 110; Beyle (1983), 161. 19 Adrian and Fine (1991), 250-51; Ransone (1982), 132. 20 Erikson, Wright and McIver (1993); Nice (1994). 21 Raw data are from The Book of the States 2004 (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2004), 329. 22 Beyle (1999), 218, 23 The Book of the States (2004), 42. 24 Thomas Dye, Understanding Public Policy (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice-Hall, 2004); Alan Rosenthal, John R. Hibbing, Burdett A. Loomis, Karl T. Kurtz, and John Hibbing (Washington, DC: CQ Press, 2002); Aaron Wildavsky and Namoi Caiden, The New Politics of the Budgetary Process, 4th edition (New York: Longman, 2001); Nice (1994); Erikson, Wright and McIver (1993). 25 Sabato (1983).

About the Authors Patrick Fisher received his Ph.D. in political science from Washington State University and is currently an assistant professor of political science at Seton Hall University. He is the author of Congressional Budgeting: A Representational Perspective and has had articles published in the Social Science Journal, Publius, Party Politics, Transportation Quarterly and White House Studies. David Nice is a professor of political science at Washington State University. Books written by Nice include Public Budgeting, Policy Innovation in State Government, Amtrak, The Politics of Intergovernmental Relations and The Presidency.

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Gubernatorial Incapacity and Succession Provisions By Brian J. Gaines and Brian D. Roberts Very rarely are living governors replaced because of incapacity. The infrequency of such events is no excuse for ambiguous resolution mechanisms; yet, several states have gaps in their legal provisions. Clarity in the grounds and procedures for replacing a governor who can no longer perform the duties of office is difficult to achieve, but the alternative is to flirt with avertable crises. Below we highlight which states seem remiss, and we catalogue some pertinent issues, without endorsing any one model as the optimal approach to this knotty question. In September 2003, Frank O’Bannon, the Democratic governor of Indiana, suffered a massive stroke. Early news stories reported that state officials had decided not to invoke the process for transferring authority to Lt. Gov. Joe Kernan (also a Democrat) until it became clear if there was any hope of O’Bannon recovering. The relevant language from Indiana’s constitution is found in Article 5, sections 10(a) and (d): (a) …In case the Governor is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office, the Lieutenant Governor shall discharge the powers and duties of the office as Acting Governor. (d)Whenever the President pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives file with the Supreme Court a written statement suggesting that the Governor is unable to discharge the powers and duties of his office, the Supreme Court shall meet within forty-eight hours to decide the question and such decision shall be final. A day later, having consulted with the doctors treating O’Bannon, the Republican senate president pro tempore and Democratic house speaker wrote to the chief justice of the Indiana Supreme Court, and the court quickly ruled that Kernan should serve as acting governor, although O’Bannon would remain in office, entitled to salary and benefits. Five days later, O’Bannon passed away, and Kernan automatically succeeded him. These unusual events, though traumatic for O’Bannon’s family, did not constitute a political crisis. The transfer of authority was dignified, without any aura of legal ambiguity or partisan controversy. Gubernatorial successions arise in many ways, and Indiana’s crisis was soon over-shadowed by the scandal-induced resignations of the governors of Connecticut and New Jersey. Every state except Hawaii has dealt with midterm gubernatorial vacancy, and succession at the apex of the executive branch is typically a smooth process, whether the precipitating 208

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event be a death, resignation under happy circumstance (e.g., following election or appointment to another office), forced resignation (e.g., following conviction of a crime or revelation of a scandal), or even impeachment, removal or recall. It is quite rare for a living governor to be too severely incapacitated to govern, but Indiana’s experience is a reminder that rare events sometimes happen. Surprisingly, a number of states have lacunae in their legal frameworks for dealing with such gubernatorial incapacity, notwithstanding the fact that controversy and nearmisses with constitutional crisis have arisen at the federal level and in several states. Here, we briefly review provisions for gubernatorial succession due to incapacity across all 50 states, in an effort to determine which are well-equipped to deal with such events, and which are vulnerable to crisis. Recognition of the frailty of officials is longstanding: the federal constitution juxtaposes “inability to discharge the Powers and Duties of [the presidency]” with death, resignation and removal when broaching the line of succession in Article II, Section 1. However, nearly two centuries passed before the 25th Amendment filled out procedures for establishing “inability,” the only inherently subjective condition of these four. The solution—also popular with states—was procedural rather than substantive. In lieu of any enumeration of conditions that constitute disability, most states (and the United States) specify procedures for replacement in the event of disability, thereby delegating discretion to individual decision-makers on a case-by-case basis. There are potential hazards in such discretion, particularly where natural partisan conflict can find its way into a determination of disability. Far more hazardous, though, is an absence of legal procedures for determining disability. Table A lays out some key aspects of how the 50 states deal with incapacity in the governor. The first column lists constitutional provisions pertaining specifically to disability, and reveals that literally every


GOVERNORS state has at least some such language in its constitution. The word counts give a fairly crude indication of the level of detail in each state’s provisions: sometimes a large number of words is deceptive insofar as the provisions are wordy, but not very detailed, or the section in question actually includes discussion of some aspect of succession other than disability (where possible, we provide a second disability-specific count in such cases). By contrast, low word counts reliably signal lack of specificity. For instance, the 53 words in Article III, Section 12 of the Alaska Constitution read simply: Whenever for a period of six months, a governor has been continuously absent from office or has been unable to discharge the duties of his office by reason of mental or physical disability, the office shall be deemed vacant. The procedure for determining absence and disability shall be prescribed by law. The second column of the table lists statutory provisions that elaborate on the constitutional language about gubernatorial disability, and Alaska’s cell is empty. The state Legislative Affairs Agency explains: To avoid a tedious recitation of procedures similar to those found in the 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, the drafters of the constitution assigned to the legislature responsibility for specifying how the office of governor could be declared vacant. The legislature has not yet done so, which may be unfortunate if the task became complicated by the circumstances of a particular situation warranting the use of this section.1 “Unfortunate” seems an understatement, and Alaska is not alone; as Table A shows, by our count, about a third of the states similarly suffer from having “unclear” legal provisions on determination of gubernatorial disability.2 Illinois is a surprising member of this club, since it has already weathered one political crisis stemming from the prolonged illhealth of a governor, and has dodged a bullet in recent memory. Gov. Henry Horner suffered a heart attack in November 1938, but clung to office through an extended convalescence rather than allow Lt. Gov. John Stelle, a fellow Democrat but also a hated rival, to take power. Unable to work for more than a few hours per day, Horner relied on a regency of unelected advisors, even as his foes launched an array of challenges.3 In 1994, the possibility of a sudden gubernatorial transition again loomed. Just days after Lt. Gov. Bob Kustra had announced plans to resign, Gov. Jim Edgar underwent unscheduled, emergency heart surgery. Kustra then acted as

Edgar’s proxy in budget negotiations, though, happily, the governor recovered quickly enough to sign the final spending bill from his hospital bed. Had Kustra resigned before chest pains seized Edgar, according to Article V, Section 6(a), that vacancy in the lieutenant governorship would have placed Democratic Attorney General Roland Burris first in the line of succession. In that event, a less speedy recovery by the governor might have precipitated a messy tussle for control. A catalogue of all crises and near misses for all states would be very long indeed. At the dramatic end of the spectrum, in 1900, Kentucky saw William Goebel, the Democratic candidate for governor in a disputed election, shot, declared elected by the legislature, and then sworn in while hospitalized, only to pass away days later. In a more recent and more mundane case, Massachusetts Gov. Jane Swift—who had succeeded to the governorship when Paul Cellucci resigned to become ambassador to Canada— came under scrutiny while bedridden, awaiting the arrival of twins. Swift, a Republican, had to fend off allegations from Democrats serving on the Governor’s Council that her physical absence from council meetings rendered her incapable of performing her constitutional duties.4 Given the many borderline or contested disability cases that did not result in succession, and many more near misses, determination of whether a chief executive is genuinely unable to perform duties is the crux of the matter, and the key column in Table A is the middle one, which identifies what actors take part in such determination. At a glance, one notes much variety. Indeed, this brief schematic cannot do justice to the diversity of procedures found across the nation. A few aspects seem particularly important.

How Many Actors (and Which ones) are Involved? In most states, governors may designate themselves unfit to govern (presumably in anticipation of an expected medical crisis, or in the midst of a rapidly worsening condition). When others must make the declaration, one of the main protections against controversy is involvement of many actors, often representing all three branches of state government. Supreme courts are frequently included, more often as arbiters (as in Indiana) than as precipitators. South Dakota’s constitution, though, provides its supreme court with “original and exclusive jurisdiction” to determine the question of disability. In justifying the designation of the supreme court as the body to “ascertain the truth” about any allegation of inabilThe Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS ity “unsound(ness of) mind,” the drafters of Alabama’s 1901 constitution explained, “The Committee can conceive of no safer body, no more august body, no body less liable to temptation to use the power for political gain or any other improper motive, than the Supreme Court of Alabama.”5

Must the Designation be Bi-partisan? In addition to being multi-member, supreme courts often (but not always) enjoy the appearance of nonpartisanship. An alternative to ceding determination power to non-partisan actors is to ensure that the procedure used to determine disability involves a bipartisan group of actors. Requiring the involvement of a large array of actors has the effect of making it more likely that both major parties will take part, though numbers alone provide no guarantee of bipartisanship. In Pennsylvania, state statute stipulates that the lieutenant governor and a majority of the governor’s 26-member (as of 2004) cabinet make a determination of disability, but the cabinet is comprised of individuals appointed by the governor and confirmed by the state senate. The legislature enters the picture only in the event of a dispute about the governor’s capacity to resume the power and duties of the office.

Can Succession Following from Disability Result in Partisan Changeover? Almost all state lines of succession allow for party changeover at some depth. Although this is not a point inherently about disability, the prospect of a partisan turnover surely complicates consideration of an incumbent governor’s fitness to stay on, given a dispute over disability. Accordingly, Table A includes a column showing the line of succession (and whether it is constitutionally or statutorily determined). The final column indicates how far down the line of succession party changeover can occur, and also provides examples in those states that have seen such party-switching successions. (To be clear, these cases did not necessarily involve disability, and all Civil War/Reconstruction switches were ignored). Indiana is unusual in the degree to which its laws mitigate against a change in gubernatorial party. First, the governor and lieutenant governor are elected on a common ticket. That is an increasingly common arrangement, and a clear insulation against partisan changeover, except in unusual circumstance. Furthermore, in the event of dual vacancies, Indiana requires the legislature to elect a replacement of the same party as the incumbent. It is only brand new changes in the constitution as of 2004—which broach 210

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a line of succession for an interim governor while the legislature makes this choice—that permit a very temporary change of gubernatorial party stemming from disability. In Pennsylvania, where the lieutenant governor also serves as president pro tempore of the senate, the potential for change in partisan control of the governorship has become more salient as two of the last three governors have either resigned (Tom Ridge) or temporarily relinquished their power (Bob Casey). The question of separation of powers is also raised, since the constitution requires the lieutenant governor to vote in the event of a tie vote in the Senate.6 Concern over potential partisan shifts even further down the line of succession has recently prompted the Massachusetts legislature to consider a proposed constitutional amendment that would allow a governor who succeeded to the post from the office of lieutenant governor the capacity to appoint a new lieutenant governor subject to the confirmation of both legislative chambers.7 In short, the shadow of partisan switches complicates every aspects of succession, including what mechanism for assessing gubernatorial incapacity is optimal.

Does the Successor Play a Role? Section four of the 25th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution provides a role for the president’s immediate successor, the vice president, in the determination of disability. Several states follow a similar practice. In Delaware, the immediate successor, while not in a position to make the determination unilaterally, could be a member of the opposite political party. There would appear to be some merit in excluding immediate successors from this process, so as to decrease the possibility of cabal. Alabama, for one, deliberately excludes the individual next in line to become governor from playing any part in rendering judgment on the fitness of the incumbent, a decision that the constitutional convention viewed as a “safeguard.”

Is There Medical Involvement? Another notable distinction among those states having clear provisions for the determination of disability is whether they require the involvement of individuals with medical expertise. States in this category include Georgia, Iowa, Nebraska and Oregon. As an example, Nebraska statutes designate the dean of the College of Medicine of the University of Nebraska and the chairperson of the Department of Psychiatry at the University of Nebraska Medical center as members of a three-person team who examine the


GOVERNORS governor and determine the issue of disability—a decision that requires unanimity among the examiners.8 Iowa similarly lodges power to evaluate a seemingly disabled governor in a three-member body including “the person who is chief justice, the person who is director of mental health, and the person who is the dean of medicine at the state university of Iowa” and even elaborates, “Provided, if either the director or dean is not a physician…the director or dean may assign a member of the director’s or dean’s staff so licensed to assist and advise on the conference.”9

Acting or Actual? In Table A, for brevity, we finesse the discrepancy between an “acting” (where powers and duties, but not the office devolve) and “actual” governor (where both the powers and the office devolve). In many cases the distinction is far from trivial; and it can be an especially important consideration in the event of disability insofar as a living, but incapacitated governor might require health benefits. In Utah, a state that has a rather detailed process for determining disability, but very limited experience with midterm succession, considerable ambiguity on the acting-versus-actual point surrounded the transition from Gov. Mike Leavitt to Lt. Gov. Olene Walker upon Leavitt’s acceptance of the office of administrator of the federal EPA in 2003. As of late 2004, the state’s Constitutional Revision Commission was considering recommendations to clarify succession procedures.10

Conclusion As we write, late in 2004, New Jersey’s unusual gubernatorial succession law is making news. By most accounts the governor of New Jersey is among the strongest of the nation’s chief executives. Excluding U.S. senators, the governor is the only statewide elected official. Vast appointment power allows the governor to select heads of executive departments, members of state and certain county commissions, judges and prosecutors. The reaches of power extend even into the legislative arena, where the governor is endowed not only with veto authority that requires a two-thirds majority in both chambers to counteract, but the capacity to request legislation for executive action in a manner that is favorable to pocket vetoes.11 The extensive powers of the New Jersey governor are compounded by the state’s succession laws. One of eight states without a separate lieutenant governor, New Jersey flouts traditional separation of powers principles by allowing (in the event of the absence, death or disability of the governor) the power of the governor to devolve upon

the president of the Senate without requiring this individual to relinquish his legislative post. 12 This scenario played out in 2001, as Senate President Donald DiFrancesco became acting governor following Gov. Christine Todd Whitman’s departure to the Bush administration. The transition from DiFrancesco’s acting governorship to the swearing-in of governor-elect Jim McGreevey in 2002 saw a week with an unprecedented four acting governors, including a farcical six-day stretch with both Republican and Democrat acting governors. 13 In the summer of 2004, McGreevey, in the midst of a scandal, precipitated another chaotic transition by announcing his resignation, but delaying it to prevent a special election for his successor. We would quickly concur that New Jersey’s laws can use an overhaul; but, to give credit where due, it is not especially remiss in detailing how a stricken governor be evaluated. By contrast, many states simply have not dealt seriously with the issue. Finally, we note that a special case of gubernatorial disability might occur in the course of a largescale emergency wherein many other state officials are also afflicted. Since September 11, 2001, there has been renewed discussion of how American governments (federal and state) would cope with an attack or other disaster that disabled numerous officials simultaneously. Many states already have fairly specific provisions to allow continuity in the operations of state government in the event of some catastrophic event (terrorist attack, natural disaster, etc.). Most statutes of this nature have their origins in the cold war era, but a few states have enacted new statutes since the 9/11 attacks. Nevada offers one example,14 and post-9/11 concern played a direct role when Virginia voters recently overwhelmingly supported a constitutional amendment adding an additional 14 potential successors to a line previously containing only three.15 As officials and scholars revisit the question of how to handle the unthinkable in many states, they would do well also to re-examine their rules for handling an isolated emergency. Inability, whether strictly medical or understood more broadly, is ambiguous and subjective in a way that death, resignation and removal are not, so clear provisions controlling how to determine when a governor should not retain office are critical. Those states that do have rules have, in many cases, passed a few trials. But the number of empirical data points is small, and it is not difficult to identify bothersome or problematic scenarios even in the states with detailed, modern constitutional and statutory provisions. Though rare, gubernatorial inability merits close attention. The Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS Notes 1 Gordon Harrison. Alaska’s Constitution: A Citizen’s Guide. 4tth ed.(Juneau, AK: Alaska Legislative Affairs Agency, 2002), 80. 2 We assembled Table A using LexisNexis and hardcopies of state codes and constitutions as well as interviews with officials in a number of states. Since constitutions and codes are constantly changing, we may have missed some provisions even with this multi-stage screening. 3 Thomas B. Littlewood, Horner of Illinois (Evanston, IL: Northwestern University Press, 1969). 4 Boston Herald, “Pregnant Pause Needed – Dems Remiss in Handling of Gov. Mom,” 13 May 2001, Op.Ed., 23. 5 Official Proceedings of the Constitutional Convention of the State of Alabama, May 21st, 1901 to September 3rd, 1901. Volume I (Wetumpka, AL: Wetumpka Printing Co., 1940), 482. 6 George Strawley, “Senate’s Top Republican Proposes New Rules for Lt. Governor,” Associated Press State and Local Wire, 24 December 2002. 7 Boston Globe, “Constitutional Questions,” 11 February 2004, A22. 8 R.R.S. Neb. § 84-127. 9 Iowa Code 7.14. 10 Nicole Warburton, “Guv’s Succession May be Clarified,” Salt Lake Tribune, 9 July 2004, B5. A determination was made that Walker assumed the full control of the power and responsibilities of the office.

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11 “Perspective: The Evolution of New Jersey’s Gubernatorial Power,” 25 Seton Hall Legis. J. 1 (2001): 5-6. 12 Julia Nienaber Hurst, “Lieutenant Governors: Powerful in Two Branches,” The Book of the States 2004 (Lexington, Ky: The Council of State Governments, 2004): 189. 13 Mike Kelly, “Just Make us Proud; We’re Longing for Return to Normalcy,” The Record (Bergen County, NJ), 14 November 2004. 14 Neb. Rev. St. § 239C.260. 15 Michael Hardy, “Changes Secure Approval; Virginia Voters Back Two Amendments to State’s Constitution,” Richmond Times-Dispatch, 3 November 2004, A25. The previous list included only the lieutenant governor, attorney general and the speaker of the House. The amendment added the chairmen of the 14 standing committees in the Virginia House of Delegates.

About the Authors Brian J. Gaines is an associate professor in the Department of Political Science and the Institute of Government and Public Affairs at the University of Illinois, UrbanaChampaign. He has served as a consultant for two Canadian Royal Commissions and for Polimetrix, Inc. Brian D. Roberts is an assistant professor of Political Science and the director of the Cox School of Government at Principia College. From 1991 to 1994, he served as the director of research for the Texas Public Policy Foundation.


GOVERNORS

Table A PROVISIONS FOR DISABILITY-BASED GUBERNATORIAL SUCCESSION IN THE 50 STATES Constitutional article, section (total words)(a)

State

Statutory elaboration on disability

Alabama .........................

V, 128 (297)

...

Alaska .............................

III, 12 (53)

...

Arizona ...........................

V, 6 (206*)

...

Arkansas ........................

CA 6, 4 (96*)

21-1-304 (159)

California .......................

V, 10 (105,* 62)

Colorado ........................

Actors involved in disability designation

Depth in line of succession for possible party switch

LG, 6 more (C)

1 (1993)

Unclear

LG, apt. (C, S)

2 (unlikely) (none)

Unclear

SS, 3 more (C)

1 (1988)

Unclear

LG, 5(b) (C, S)

1 (1996)

12070-12076 (259)

5-member commission, SC

LG, 6 more (C, S)

1 (1917)

IV, 13[6] (137)

...

G; legislature, SC

LG, 4 more (C)

2 (unlikely) (none)

Connecticut ....................

CA XXII, IV, 18c-h (869)

Vol. 1, 3, 31, 3-1a (370)

G; LG, 9-member council, SC, legislature

LG, PPT (C, S)

2 (1946)

Delaware ........................

III, 20b (368)

...

G; 3-member board (incl LG), legislature LG, 4 more (C)

Florida ............................

IV, 3b (129)

...

G; 4 cabinet members, G, legislature, SC

LG, 6 more (C, S)

2 (none)

Georgia ...........................

V, IV (265)

...

Any 4 elected exec., SC, at least 3 physicians

LG, SH(b) (C)

1 (none)

Hawaii ............................

V, 4 (147,* 43)

...

Unclear

LG, 7 more (C, S)

2 (none)

Idaho ...............................

IV, 12 (75,* 37)

67-805A[2] (43)

Unclear

LG, PPT, SH (C)

1 (none)

Illinois .............................

V, 6c-d (136)

15 ILCS 5/0.01 (224*)

G; otherwise unclear

LG, 6 more (C, S)

2 (none)

Indiana ...........................

5, 10c-d (216)

...

G; PPT, SH, SC

LG, 6(b), leg-el (C)

2(b), no (none)

Iowa ................................

IV, 17, 19 (248)

7.14 (362)

CJ, next in line of succession, LG, PPT, SH leg-el (C) 2 (none) 3-member board, G

Kansas ............................

I, 11 (167)

75-126 (147)

Unclear

LG, PPT, SH (C, S)

2 (none)

Kentucky ........................

84 (286)

...

G; AG, SC

LG, PS (C)

2 (1834)(c)

Louisiana .......................

IV, 17-18 (447)

...

G; 5/9 stwd elec. exec., G, legislature, SC

LG, 5 more (C)

1 (none)

Maine ..............................

V, 1, 14-15 (839,* 445) . . .

G; legislature, SC; SS, SC

PPT, SH

1 (1959)

Maryland .......................

II, 6 (851)

G; legislature, SC

LG, PS, leg. picks (C) 2 (1969)(c)

Massachusetts ...............

XCI (459)

...

G; SC (or other body)

LG, 4 more (C)

2 (none)

Michigan ........................

V, 26 (211,* 116)

...

G; PPT, SH, SC

LG, 2 more (C)

2 (none)

Minnesota ......................

V, 5 (157)

4.06, c-e (383)

G, 3/4-member board, G, legislature

LG, 5 more (C, S)

2 (1915)(c)

Mississippi .....................

V, 131 (319)

...

SS, SC

LG, PPT, SH (C)

1 (1876)

Missouri .........................

IV, 11a-b (574)

...

G; 9-member board (LG), SC LG, 6 more (C)

1 (none)

Montana .........................

VI, 14[2-5] (235)

...

G; LG & AG, legislature

2 (none)

Nebraska ........................

IV, 16 (197*)

84-127, 128 (353)

LG & 3-member board LG, SH (C) of medical and psych. experts

Nevada ............................

V, 17-18 (230*)

223.080 (184*)

Unclear

LG, 3 more (C, S)

1 (none)

New Hampshire .............

II, 49-a (504)

...

G; AG & 5-member elected council, SC

PS, 3 more(b) (C)

1 (none)

New Jersey .....................

V, 1[7-8] (284*)

...

G; legislature, SC

PS, 3 more (C, S)

1 (2001)

New Mexico ...................

V, 7 (305*)

...

Unclear

LG, 7 more (C, S)

2 (1917)(c)

New York ........................

V, 5-6 (455*)

...

Unclear

LG, 2 more (C)

2 (1829)(c)

North Carolina ..............

III, 3 (329*, 197)

...

G; AG, legislature

LG, 10 more (C, S)

1 (none)

North Dakota ................

V, 11 (65*)

...

Unclear

LG, 4 more (C, S)

2 (1935)(c)

Ohio ................................

III, 15, 22 (449*, 212) . . .

G; legislature, SC

LG 6 more (C, S)

2 (1957)

...

Any 2 in line of succession except successor, SC

Line of succession

LG, PS, SH (C)

1 (1895)(c)

2 (1960)

See Footnotes at end of table

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PROVISIONS FOR DISABILITY-BASED GUBERNATORIAL SUCCESSION IN THE 50 STATES—Continued

State

Constitutional article, section (total words)(a)

Statutory elaboration on disability

Actors involved in disability designation

Line of succession

Depth in line of succession for possible party switch

Oklahoma ......................

VI, 15-16 (235*)

74, 8 (593)

G; PPT, SH, 6-member committee, legislature, SC

LG, PPT, SH (C, S)

1 (none)

Oregon ............................

V, 8a (264*)

176.040, 176.050 (318)

G; SS,CJof SC, 2 medical experts

SS, 3 more (C)

1 (1909)

Pennsyvlania .................

IV, 13 (65*)

71, 784.1-784.3 (333)

G; LG, Gov.’s Cabinet, legislature

LG, PPT, SH (C, S)

2 (1848)(c)

Rhode Island .................

IX, 9-10 (107*)

...

SC

LG, 4 more (C, S)

1 (none)

South Carolina ..............

IV, 11-12 (431*, 334)

...

G; PPT & SH, AG, SS, Compt. Gen., legislature

LG, 5 more (C, S)

1 (none)

South Dakota .................

IV, 6 (188*)

...

SC

LG, 10 more (C, S)

2 (none)

Tennessee .........................

III, 12 (70*)

8-1-109[b,1-2] (101)

G (to authorize power of atty,), otherwise unclear

LG, 4 more (C, S)

1 (none)

Texas ...............................

IV, 3a (249*)

...

Unclear

LG, 3 more (+ order 1 (none) of 14 ct. of appearls CJs) (C, S)

Utah ................................

VII, 11 (538*, 167)

...

G; PS, SH, SC

LG, 5 more (C, S)

Vermont .........................

II, 24 (161*)

...

Unclear

LG, 4 more (C, S)

1 (1991)

Virginia ..........................

V, 16 (559*, 341)

24.2-211 (341)

G; PPT, SH, AG, legislature

LG, 6 more (C, S)

1 (none)

Washington ....................

III, 10 (378*)

...

Unclear

LG, 6 more (C)

1 (1919)

West Virginia .................

VII, 16 (133*)

...

Unclear

PS, 3 more

1 (none)

Wisconsin .......................

V, 7-8 (222*)

17.025 (751)

7 member diasbility board that includes G (see 14.015 of statutes)

LG, 5 more (C, S)

2 (none)

Wyoming ........................

IV, 6 (51*)

...

Unclear

SS, 7 more

1 (1949)

Source: Compiled by the authors from relevant constitutions, statutes and reference sources, 2004. Key: C—Constitutional provisions CJ—Chief Justice G—Governor LG—Lieutenant Governor PPT—President (Pro Tempore) of the Senate PS—President of the Senate S—Statute

214

The Book of the States 2005

2 (none)

SC—Supreme Court SH—Speaker of the House SS—Secretary of State apt.—individual appointed into line of sucession by the governor, subject to legislative confirmation . leg-el— individual elected by the legislature (a) For those numbers followed by an asterick, the word count covers section with other details (e.g. succession in case of death). (b) Successor takes power only on an interim or acting basis, pending special election. (c) Occurred under a previous constitutional or statutory regime.


The Council of State Governments

Linda Lingle (R) Dirk Kempthorne (R) Rod R. Blagojevich (D) Mitch Daniels (R) Thomas J. Vilsack (D)

Kathleen Sebelius (D) Ernie Fletcher (R) Kathleen Babineaux Blanco (D) John Baldacci (D) Robert L. Ehrlich Jr. (R)

Mitt Romney (R) Jennifer Granholm (D) Tim Pawlenty (R) Haley Barbour (R) Matt Blunt (R)

Brian Schweitzer (D) Dave Heineman (R) Kenny Guinn (R) John Lynch (D) Richard Codey (D)

Bill Richardson (D) George E. Pataki (R) Michael F. Easley (D) John Hoeven (R) Bob Taft (R)

Brad Henry (D) Ted Kulongoski (D) Edward G. Rendell (D) Don Carcieri (R) Mark Sanford (R)

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

See footnotes at end of table.

Bill Owens (R) M. Jodi Rell (R) Ruth Ann Minner (D) Jeb Bush (R) Sonny Perdue (R)

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Name and party

Bob Riley (R) Frank H. Murkowski (R) Janet Napolitano (D) Mike Huckabee (R) Arnold Schwarzenegger (R)

4 4 4 4 4

4 4 4 4 4

4 4 4 2 4

4 4 4 4 4

4 4 4 4 4

4 4 4 4 4

4 4 4 4 4

4 4 4 4 4

Length of regular term in years

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State or other jurisdiction

Table 4.1 THE GOVERNORS, 2005

1/03 1/03 1/03 1/03 1/03

1/03 1/95 1/01 12/00 1/99

1/05 1/05 (e) 1/99 1/05 11/04 (i)

1/03 1/03 1/03 1/04 1/05

1/03 12/03 1/04 1/03 1/03

12/02 1/99 1/03 1/05 1/99

1/99 7/04 (o) 1/01 1/99 1/03

1/03 12/02 1/03 7/96 (b) 11/03 (c)

Date of first service

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/07 1/07

1/07 1/07 1/09 12/08 1/07

1/09 1/07 1/07 1/07 1/06

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/08 1/09

1/07 12/07 1/08 1/07 1/07

12/06 1/07 1/07 1/09 1/07

1/07 1/07 1/09 1/07 1/07

1/07 12/06 1/07 1/07 1/07

Present term ends

... ... ... ... ...

... 2 1 1 1

... ... 1 ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... 1 ... ... 1

1 ... 1 1 ...

... ... ... 1 ...

Number of previous terms

2 2 2 2 2

2 ... 2 (f) ... 2 (f)

2 (g) 2 2 ... 2

... 2 ... 2 2

2 2 2 2 2

2 ... ... 2 (f) ...

2 ... 2 2 (d) 2

2 (d) 2 2 2 (b) 2

Maximum consecutive terms allowed by constitution

No (k) Yes No No

Yes Yes No Yes Yes

Yes Yes No (k) (k)

Yes Yes Yes No No

Yes Yes No (k) Yes

Yes No Yes Yes Yes

Yes Yes No Yes No

No Yes (k) No No

Joint election of governor and lieutenant governor (a)

LG SS LG LG LG

LG LG LG LG LG

LG LG LG PS PS

LG LG LG LG LG

LG LG LG PS LG

LG LG LG LG LG

LG LG LG LG LG

LG LG SS LG LG

Official who succeeds governor Birthdate

6/10/63 11/5/40 1/5/44 12/16/42 5/28/60

11/15/47 6/24/45 3/23/50 3/13/57 1/8/42

9/4/55 5/12/48 8/24/36 11/25/52 11/27/46

3/12/47 2/5/59 11/27/60 10/22/47 11/20/70

5/15/48 11/12/52 12/15/42 1/30/55 11/25/57

6/4/53 10/29/51 12/10/56 4/7/49 12/13/50

10/22/50 6/16/46 1/17/35 2/11/53 12/20/46

10/3/44 3/28/33 11/29/57 8/24/55 7/30/47

OK MO NY RI FL

CA NY NC ND OH

MT NE AR MA NJ

MI BC MN MS MO

OH KY LA ME MD

MO CA IL PA PA

TX VA DE TX GA

AL WA NY AR Aus.

Birthplace

GOVERNORS

215


216

The Book of the States 2005

Mike Rounds (R) Phil Bredesen (D) Rick Perry (R) Jon M. Huntsman Jr. (R) Jim Douglas (R)

Mark R. Warner (D) Christine Gregoire (D) Joe Manchin III (D) Jim Doyle (D) Dave Freudenthal (D)

Togiola Tulafono (D) Felix P. Camacho (R) Juan N. Babauta (R) Anibal Acevedo-Vila (PDP) Charles W. Turnbull (D)

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands ............. 4 4 4 4 4

4 4 4 4 4

4 4 4 4 2

4/03 (m) 1/03 1/02 1/05 1/99

1/02 1/05 1/05 1/03 1/03

1/03 1/03 12/00 (h) 1/05 1/03

Date of first service

1/09 1/07 1/06 1/09 1/07

1/06 1/09 1/09 1/07 1/07

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/09 1/07

Present term ends

Sources: The Council of State Governments survey, December 2004. Key: D — Democrat PDP — Popular Democratic Party R — Republican LG — Lieutenant Governor SS — Secretary of the Senat PS — President of the Senate SpS — Speaker of the Senate . . . — Not applicable (a) The following also choose candidates for governor and lieutenant governor through a joint nomination process: Florida, Kansas, Maryland, Minnesota, Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, Utah, American Samoa, Guam, No. Mariana Islands and U.S. Virgin Islands. (b) Governor Huckabee, as lieutenant governor, became Governor in July 1996 after Governor Jim Guy Tucker resigned. He was elected to a full four-year term in November 1998. (c) Governor Schwarzenegger was sworn in on November 17, 2003 after defeating Governor Gray Davis in a recall election. (d) Limited to 8 consecutive years in office. (e) Governor Heineman, as lieutenant governor, was sworn-in as Nebraska’s governor on Friday, January 21, 2005 after Governor Johanns resigned on January 20, 2005 upon being confirmed as the United States Secretary of Agriculture.

Name and party

Length of regular term in years

State or other jurisdiction

THE GOVERNORS, 2005 — Continued

2 2 2 (n) ... (f)

(j) ... 2 ... 2 (g)

2 2 ... ... ...

Maximum consecutive terms allowed by constitution

Yes Yes Yes (k) Yes

No No (k) Yes (k)

Yes No No Yes No

Joint election of governor and lieutenant governor (a)

LG LG LG SS LG

LG LG PS LG SS

LG SpS (l) LG LG LG

Official who succeeds governor Birthdate

2/28/47 10/30/57 9/7/53 2/13/63 2/5/35

12/14/54 3/24/57 8/24/47 11/23/45 10/12/50

10/24/54 11/21/43 3/4/50 3/26/60 6/21/51

AS GU CNMI PR VI

IN WA WV D.C. WY

SD NJ TX CA MA

Birthplace

(f) After two consecutive terms as Governor, the candidate must wait four years before becoming eligible to run again. (g) Absolute limit of eight years of service out of every 16 years. (h) Lt. Gov. Perry was sworn in on December 21, 2000 to complete President George W. Bush’s term as governor of Texas. (i) As Senate President Governor Codey took over the additional role of acting governor when Governor James E. McGreevey resigned from office on November 15, 2004. Codey previously served as acting governor from January 12, 2002 until January 15, 2002, when he shared the acting governor responsibilities with Senate Co-President, John Bennett, during the time between the expiration of Senate President Donald T. DiFrancesco’s term (when he was also serving as acting governor) and the swearing in of the newly elected governor, James E. McGreevey. (j) Governor cannot serve immediate successive terms. (k) No lieutenant governor. (l) Official bears the additional title of “ lieutenant governor.” (m) Governor Tulafono, as lieutenant governor, became Governor in April 2003 after Governor Sunia’s death. (n) Absolute two-term limitation, but terms need not be consecutive. (o) Lieutenant Governor Rell was sworn in as governor on July 1, 2004 after Governor John Rowland resigned.

1 ... ... ... 1

... ... ... ... ...

... ... 1 ... 1

Number of previous terms

GOVERNORS


GOVERNORS

Table 4.2 THE GOVERNORS: QUALIFICATIONS FOR OFFICE State or other jurisdiction

Minimum age

State citizen (years)

U.S. citizen (years) (a)

State resident (years) (b)

Qualified voter (years)

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

30 30 25 30 18

7 7 5 ★ ...

10 7 10 ★ 5

... 7 ... 7 5

★ ★ ... ... ★

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

30 30 30 30 30

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ 12 ★ 15

2 ★ 6 7 6

... ★ ... ★ ★

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

30 30 25 30 30

... ... 3 ... ...

... ★ ★ 5 2

5 2 3 5 2

★ ... ★ ★ ...

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

... 30 25 30 30

... 6 5 ... ...

... ... 5 15 (c)

... 6 5 5 5

... ... ★ ... 5

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

... 30 25 30 30

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ★ 20 15

7 ★ 1 5 10

... 4 ★ ★ ...

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

25 30 25 30 30

★ 5 2 ... ...

★ 5 2 ... 20

★ 5 2 7 7

... ... ★ ... ...

New Mexico ....................... New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

30 25 30 30 18

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ 5 ★ ★

5 1 2 5 ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

31 30 30 18 30

... ... ... 30 days 5

... ★ ★ ★ 5

... 3 7 30 days 5

★ ★ ... ★ ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

21 30 30 30 18

★ 7 ... 5 1

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

2 ... 5 5 4

... ... ... ★ ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

30 18 30 18 30

... ... 5 ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

5 ★ 1 ★ 5

5 ★ ★ ★ ...

American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

35 30 35 35 30

... ... ... 5 ...

★ 5 ★ 5 5

5 5 10 5 5

... ★ ★ ... ★

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey of governor’s offices, December 2004. Key: ★— Formal provision; number of years not specified. . . .— No formal provision. (a) In some states you must be a U.S. citizen to be an elector, and must be an elector to run.

(b) In some states you must be a state resident to be an elector, and must be an elector to run. (c) Crosse v. Board of Supervisors of Elections 243 Md. 555, 221A.2d431 (1966)—opinion rendered indicated that U.S. citizenship was, by necessity, a requirement for office.

The Council of State Governments

217


GOVERNORS

Table 4.3 THE GOVERNORS: COMPENSATION, STAFF, TRAVEL AND RESIDENCE State or other jurisdiction

Access to state transportation

Salary

Governor’s office staff (a)

Automobile

Airplane

Helicopter

Travel allowance

Official residence

Alabama ........................ Alaska ............................ Arizona .......................... Arkansas ....................... California ......................

$96,361 85,766 95,000 75,296 175,000

43 70 39 55 86

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

(b) (k) (b) ★ (c)

★ ★ ... ★ (d)

Colorado ....................... Connecticut ................... Delaware ....................... Florida ........................... Georgia ..........................

90,000 150,000 132,500 120,171 127,303

39 30 32 310 87

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ★

(e) (e) ... (b) (e)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Hawaii ........................... Idaho .............................. Illinois ............................ Indiana .......................... Iowa ...............................

94,780 98,500 150,691 95,000 107,482

67 24 130 34 19

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★(e) (b) (b) (b)

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Kansas ........................... Kentucky ....................... Louisiana ...................... Maine ............................. Maryland ......................

98,331 127,146 94,532 70,000 135,000

24 80 117 (l) 19 84

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

(b) (b) (b) (b) (e)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Massachusetts .............. Michigan ....................... Minnesota ..................... Mississippi .................... Missouri ........................

135,000 (j) 177,000 120,311 122,160 120,087

78 56 45 29 38

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

(b) (e) (e) (e) (c)

... ★ ★ ★ ★

Montana ........................ Nebraska ....................... Nevada ........................... New Hampshire ............ New Jersey ....................

93,089 85,000 117,000 96,060 157,000

18 9 (g) 23 156

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ... ★

(b) (b) (c) (e) $61,000

New Mexico .................. New York ....................... North Carolina ............. North Dakota ............... Ohio ...............................

110,000 179,000 121,391 85,506 126,485

27 180 76 17 60

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

$79,200 (c) (b) $11,500 (b) (f)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Oklahoma ..................... Oregon ........................... Pennsylvania ................ Rhode Island ................ South Carolina .............

110,298 93,600 155,753 105,194 106,078

34 29 68 49 22

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

(b) (e) (b) N.A. (b)

★ ★ ★ ... ★

South Dakota ................ Tennessee ...................... Texas .............................. Utah ............................... Vermont ........................

103,222 85,000 115,345 101,600 133,162

22.5 36 266 16.5 14

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ...

(b) (e) (b) $76,000 ★

(m) ★ ★ ★ ...

Virginia ......................... Washington ................... West Virginia ................ Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming .......................

124,855 139,087 90,000 131,768 (n) 130,000

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

(b) (e) (h) (e) (b)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

$105,000 (c) $218/day (e)(i) ... (b)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

American Samoa .......... Guam ............................. No. Mariana Islands .... Puerto Rico ................... U.S. Virgin Islands .......

50,000 90,000 70,000 70,000 80,000

See footnotes at end of table.

218

The Book of the States 2005

43 36 56 39.75 8 23 42 16 352 86

★ ★ ★ ★ (f) ★


GOVERNORS

THE GOVERNORS: COMPENSATION, STAFF, TRAVEL AND RESIDENCE— Continued Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey, December 2004. Key: ★—Yes . . . —No N.A.—Not available. (a) Definitions of “governor’s office staff vary across the states–from general office support to staffing for various operations within the executive office. (b) Reimbursed for travel expenses. Alabama–reimbursed for travel expenses. Arizona–receives up to $38/day for meals based on location; receives per diem for lodging out-of-state; default $28/day for meals and $50/day lodging in-state. Florida–reimbursed at same rate as other state officials: in state, choice between $50 per diem or actual expenses; out of state, actual expenses. Indiana–Statute allows $12,000 but due to budget cuts the amount has been reduced to $9,800 and reimbursed for actual expenses for travel/lodging. Illinois–no set allowance. Iowa –limit set in annual office budget. Kentucky– mileage at same rate as other state officials. Kansas- reimbursed for actual expenses. Louisiana–reimbursed for actual expenses. Massachusetts–As necessary. Montana–reimbursed for actual and necessary expenses. Nebraska– reimbursed for travel expenses. New York–reimbursed for actual and necessary expenses. North Dakota–reimbursed at state rate. Oklahoma–reimbursed for actual expenses. Pennsylvania–reimbursed for reasonable expenses. Texas

–full reimbursement. Virginia–reimbursed for travel related to the duties of office. Wyoming–$85/day or actual. U.S. Virgin Islands–reimbursed 100 percent. (c) Amount includes travel allowance for entire staff. Missouri amount not available. California–$145,000 in state; $36,000 out of state. Nevada– these figures include travel expenses for governor and staff, $30,308 in state; $21,576 out of state. New Mexico–$79,200 (in state $45,600, out of state $33,600). (d) In California–provided by Governor’s Residence Foundation, a nonprofit organization which provides a residence for the governor of California. No rent is charged; maintenance and operational costs are provided by California Department of General Services. (e) Travel allowance included in office budget. (f) Set administratively. (g) Sixteen active and 21 authorized staff. (h) Included in general expense account. (i) Governor has a “contingency account” that can be used for travel expenses and expenses in other departments or other projects. (j) Governor Romney waives his salary. (k) Travel allowance- Alaska-$42/day per diem plus actual lodging expenses. (l) Figure does not include 37 part time employees. (m) Governor’s residence is under construction. (n) Governor Doyle remits a portion of his salary to the state.

The Council of State Governments

219


220

The Book of the States 2005 ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ★ ... ... ★ ... ... ... ★ ... ★ ... ... ★ ... ... ... ... ★ ... ... ... ★ ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ (b) ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ (b) ... ★ (b)

★ ... ★ ★ (b) ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ (b) ★ ★ (b) ...

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

See footnotes at end of table.

★ ★

... ★ ... ... ★

★ ... ★ (b) ★ ...

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

(j)

★ ★

★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

Shares responsibility

... ★ ★ (b) ... ★ (b)

Full responsibility

Governor has item veto power on all bills

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State or other jurisdiction

Budget making power

Table 4.4 THE GOVERNORS: POWERS

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★ ★

★ ★

★ (d) ★

Governor has item veto power on appropriations only

★ ★

...

★ (m)

Governor has no item veto power

Item veto power

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ (k) ★ ★ (k) ★ ★

★ ★ ★ (k) ... ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

Item veto— 2/3 legislators present or 3/5 elected to override

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

...

... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

Item veto— majority legislators elected to override

... ★ ... ... ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

(e) ... ... ... ...

★ (g) ★ ★

★ ★ ★ (l) ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★ (f)

... ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

Authorization for reorganization through executive order (a)

GOVERNORS


... ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ (b) ...

... ★ ... ★ (b) ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands ............. ... ...

... ★

★ (h)

Governor has item veto power on all bills

... ... ★

★ ★ (i)

★ ★ ★ ★

Governor has item veto power on appropriations only

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey of governor’s offices, December 2004. Key: ★—Yes; provision for. . . . —No; not applicable. (a) For additional information on executive orders, see Table 4.5. (b) Full responsibility to propose; legislature adopts or revises and governor signs or vetoes. (c) Includes only executive branch officials who are popularly elected either on a constitutional or statutory basis (elected members of state boards of education, public utilities commissions, university regents, or other state boards or commissions are also included); the number of agencies involving theses officials is also listed. (d) Governor may only veto a specific appropriation within a general appropriation bill or an entire bill. 2/3 of both houses can override.

★ ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ... ★ ★

Sout❈ Dakota ..................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Shares responsibility

Full responsibility

State or other jurisdiction

Budget making power

THE GOVERNORS: POWERS — Continued

... ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

Item veto— 2/3 legislators present or 3/5 elected to override

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

Item veto— majority legislators elected to override

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Authorization for reorganization through executive order (a)

(e) Statutory. (f) Limited. Sole authority to grant clemency after recomendation of Iowa Board of Parole. (g) Authorization for reorganization provided for in state constitution. (h) Governor has veto power of selections for nonappropriations and item veto in appropriations. (i) In Wisconsin, governor has “partial” veto over appropriation bills. The partial veto is broader than item veto. (j) Amendatory veto while legislature is in session. (k) 2/3 of elected legislators of each house to override. (l) Only for agencies and office within the Governor’s Office. (m) Governor may amend one or more provisions of any bill, but legislature may override by a majority vote.

... ...

Governor has no item veto power

Item veto power

GOVERNORS

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S S C,S C,S, Case Law S (ss)

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

S C,S S,I S C,S,I

C C,S S,I S,I S,I (z)

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

See footnotes at end of table.

C, S C S C C,S,Common Law

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

C,S C,S C,S (g) (u) C,S

S,I S C C,S S,I (qq)

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

S,I (b) C I C S

Authorization for executive orders

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State or other jurisdiction

★ I ★ ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ I ★ ... ...

★ (f) ★ ★ ★ (h) ★

★ ... ★ (a) ... ★

Other emergencies

★ ... ★ ★ (limited) ...

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ (x) ★ I ★ ★ ... ★ (a) ★ ★ ★ S ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ S ★ ★

★ ★ S ★ ★

★ ★ I ★ ★ (cc)

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ... S,C ... ★

★ ... ... ... (dd)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (m) ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ......................................................................................................... ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ (mm) ★

Civil defense disasters, public emergencies

★ ... ★ (a) ★ ★

Energy emergencies and conservation

★ ... ★ (a) ★ ★

Executive branch reorganization plans and agency creation

Procedures

Respond to federal programs and requirements ★ I ★ ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ★

State personnel administration ★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ (nn) ★

★ ... ... ... ★

★ . . .(rr) ★ ... ...

... ★ (gg) ... ★ (i)(j)(ll) ★

★ ... ... ... ★

Other administration

★ ★ I ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... S ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... S ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ★

... ... S,C (j)(p)(q)(r)(y)(aa) ...

★ ★ I ★ (o) ★ (aa)

★ ... (y) ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (n)(o)(p) ★ ★ ★ ★ (s) .......................................................................................... ★ ★ ★ ★ (v)

★ I ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Create advisory, coordinating, study or investigative committees/commissions

222 Filing and publication procedures ... ★ S ... ★

★ (c) ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ (c)(l) ★ ★ (w)

... ★ (c) ★ (l) ... ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ★ (c) ★

. . . (pp) ★ ★ (c) ... ...

Provisions

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ★ ...

... ★ ... ... ★

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Subject to administrative procedure act

Table 4.5 GUBERNATORIAL EXECUTIVE ORDERS: AUTHORIZATION, PROVISIONS, PROCEDURES

Subject to legislative review ... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ★ (w) ★ ★(w)(bb)

(ee) ★ ... ... ★ (w)

★ ... ...

...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

GOVERNORS


C C,S C,S S (a) S

C S I S S,I

S,I S C,S C,S (e)

C,S C C I C

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

See footnotes at end of table.

Authorization for executive orders

State or other jurisdiction

Energy emergencies and conservation ★ ★ ... ★ (a) ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ ★ I ★ ★

Civil defense disasters, public emergencies ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Other emergencies ★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ (g) ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ (hh) C ... ★

★ (kk) ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★ (ii)

★ ★ ... ★ ★ (l)(t)(v)(ff) . . . ... ★ (a) ★ ...

Executive branch reorganization plans and agency creation

Procedures Create advisory, coordinating, study or investigative committees/commissions ★ ★ S,I ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

Respond to federal programs and requirements ★ ★ S ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

State personnel administration ★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ (k) ...

Other administration ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ (o)(aa)(dd) ...

... ★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ★ (ff) ... ★

Filing and publication procedures ★ (oo) ★ S ... ★

... ... ... ★ (c) ...

★ ★ (c) ... ... ...

★ ★ (c) ★ (c,l) ... ★

Provisions

★ (oo) ... I ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Subject to administrative procedure act

GUBERNATORIAL EXECUTIVE ORDERS: AUTHORIZATION, PROVISIONS, PROCEDURES — Continued

Subject to legislative review ... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ★(jj)

... ... ... ... ...

GOVERNORS

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224

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey, December 2004. Key: C—Constitutional S—Statutory I—Implied ★—Formal provision. . . .—No formal provision. (a) Broad interpretation of gubernatorial authority. (b) Authorization for executive orders granted by constitution, statute, case law, common law, and implied. (c) Executive orders must be filed with secretary of state or other designated officer. In Idaho, must also be published in state general circulation newspaper. (d) Governor required to keep record in office. In Maine, also sends copy to Legislative Counsel, State Law Library, and all county law libraries in state. (e) No specific authorization granted, general authority only. (f) To regulate distribution of necessities during shortages. (g) Broad grant of authority. (h) Local financial emergency, shore erosion, polluted discharge and energy shortage. (i) To reassign state attorneys and public defenders. (j) To suspend certain officials and/or other civil actions. (k) To transfer allocated funds. (l) Filing. (m) To give immediate effect to state regulation in emergencies. (n) To control administration of state contracts and procedures. (o) To impound or freeze certain state matching funds. (p) To reduce state expenditures in revenue shortfall. (q) To designate game and wildlife areas or other public areas. (r) Appointive powers. (s) Executive Orders generally may issue with respect to both emergent and non-emergent matters falling within the Executive Branch. (t) For fire emergencies.

(u) Authority implied statutorily and by course of practice. (v) To control procedures for dealing with public. (w) Reorganization plans and agency creation. (x) If an energy emergency is declared by the state’s Executive Council or legislature. (y) To assign duties to lieutenant governor, issue writ of special election. (z) Executive authority implied except for emergencies which are established by statute. (aa) To administer and govern the armed forces of the state. (bb) Reorganization plans ans agency creation and for meeting federal program requirements. (cc) To declare air pollution emergencies. (dd) Relating to local governments. (ee) Only for ERO’s. (ff) To transfer funds in an emergency. (gg) Matters relating to the enforcement and administration of Connecticut law (hh) Can reorganize, but not create. (ii) Subject to legislative approval. (jj) Only if reorganization order filed with the legislature. (kk) To shift agencies between secretarial offices; all other reorganizations require legislative approval. (ll) By executive order, governor may also suspend collection of fines and forfeitures, grant reprieves not exceeding 60 days and with approval of 3 cabinet members, grant full or conditional pardons, restore civil rights, commute punishment and remit fines and forfeiture for offenses. (mm) Governor may also delineate an interjurisdictional area to prepare, plan, mitigate or respond to emergency. (nn) Governor may also declare an office vacant. (oo) If executive order fits definition of rule. (pp) The Secretary of State also signs. Notices are sent to both houses of the legislature and a number of other state officials. (qq) Governor customarily exercises powers via executive order; authorization implied via selected statutes. (rr) Some implied. (ss) Authorization for executive orders granted by statute, case law, common law and implied.

GUBERNATORIAL EXECUTIVE ORDERS: AUTHORIZATION, PROVISIONS, PROCEDURES — Continued

GOVERNORS

The Book of the States 2005


GOVERNORS

Table 4.6 STATE CABINET SYSTEMS

State or other jurisdiction

State constitution

Governor created

Tradition in state

Appointed to specific office (a)

Elected to specified office (a)

Gubernatorial appointment regardless of office

Criteria for membership

State statute

Authorization for cabinet system

Number of members in cabinet (including governor)

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

★ ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ... ★

29 18 38 46 13

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

... ★ ... ... ★ ... ... ★ ... ... ★ ... ★ ... ... ... ★ ... ... ★ ... ... ... ★ ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (d)

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

★ ★ ... ... ★ ... ★ ------------------------------------------- (d) ----------------------------------------★ ... ... ... ... ... ★ ... ... ★ ... ... ... ★ ★ ... ... ... ★ ... ...

25 22 18 16 32

Monthly Gov.’s discretion N.A. Bi-monthly Quarterly

... ... ... ... ...

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

★ ★ ★ ... ★

14 10 14 21 28

Bi-weekly Weekly Monthly Weekly Every other week

... ... ... ... ...

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

★ ... ... ... ★ ... ... 10 Bi-weekly ... ... ... ★ ★ ... ... ★ 24 Monthly ... ... ... ★ ... ★ ... ... 25 Regularly ... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (d) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------... ★ ... ★ ★ ... ... 17 Gov.’s discretion ...

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

★ ... ★ ... ★ ... ... 17 Gov.’s discretion ★ ... ... ★ ★ ★ ... ★ 29 Monthly ... ------------------------------------------- (d) ----------------------------------------22 At call of the governor . . . ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (d) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------★ ★ ... ... ★ ... ... 19 Gov.’s discretion ...

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina (f) .............. North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

★ ... ★ ... ★

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

★ ... ... ... ... ... ★ 10–15 Monthly ... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (d) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------★ ... ... ... ★ (c) ... ... 19 Gov.’s discretion ★ ------------------------------------------- (d) ----------------------------------------14 Gov.’s discretion Gov.’s discretion ★ ... ... ... ★ (c) ... ... 15 Monthly ★

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

★ ★ ... ... ★ ... ... 19 Monthly ★ ★ ... ... ... ★ ... ... 28 Monthly ... ------------------------------------------------------------------------ (d) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------★ ... ★ (h) ★ ... ... 31 Monthly ... ★ ... ... ... ★ ... ... 7 Gov.’s discretion ...

Virginia ............................... Washington .........................

★ ...

... ...

... ★

... ...

★ ★

... ...

... ...

13 28

West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

... ★ ★

... ... ...

★ ... ...

★ ... ...

★ ★ ...

... ... ...

... ... ★

American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

... ... ★ (i) ...

★ ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Frequency of cabinet meetings

Open cabinet meetings

Monthly Gov.’s discretion Monthly Monthly Every two weeks

★ ★ (b) ... ... ...

... 21 Gov.’s discretion ★ ... 27 Gov.’s discretion ... ★ 19 Gov.’s discretion ... ... 7 Every two weeks ★ -----------------------------------------------------------------------------

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ...

17 75 10 18 24

Weekly Gov.’s discretion Monthly Monthly Gov.’s discretion

... ... ... ★ ★

... ...

10 16 20

Weekly Bi-weekly, weekly during legislative session Weekly Gov.’s discretion Monthly

16 55 16 (j) 21

Gov.’s discretion Bi-monthly Gov.’s discretion Monthly Monthly

★ ... ★ ... ★

... ★ ...

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

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GOVERNORS

STATE CABINET SYSTEMS — Continued Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey, December 2004. Key: ★—Yes . . . —No N.A.—Not available (a) Individual is a member by virtue of election or appointment to a cabinet-level position. (b) Except when in executive session. (c) With the consent of the senate. (d) No formal cabinet system. In Idaho, however, sub-cabinets have been formed, by executive order; the chairs report to the governor. (e) Sub-cabinets meet quarterly. (f) Constitution provides for a Council of State made up of elective state administrative officials, which makes policy decisions for the state while the

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cabinet acts more in an advisory capacity. (g) Cabinet consists of agencies, created by legislation; directors of agencies appointed by the governor. (h) In Utah, department heads serve as cabinet; meets at discretion of governor, but when first appointed, department heads also require advice and consent of Senate. (i) Authority implied statutorily and by course of practice.Some of those department heads along with other officials compose the Governor’s Cabinet. (j) 81 executive agencies, 11 government support agencies of the executive and 48 public corporations. (k) No legal authorization, informal governor tradition. Members are appointed at the governor’s discretion.


GOVERNORS

Table 4.7 THE GOVERNORS: PROVISIONS AND PROCEDURES FOR TRANSITION Provision for:

State or other jurisdiction

Gov-elect’s State Legislation participation Gov-elect to personnel pertaining to Appropriation in state budget hire staff to to be made gubernatorial available to for coming assist during available to transition gov-elect ($) fiscal year transition assist gov-elect

Office space in buildings to be made available to gov-elect

★ ... ★ ... ★

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

...

... ★ (l) ... 30,000 450,000

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

★ ★ ★ ... ★

10,000 0 30,000 300,000 50,000

... ...

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

★ ★ ... ★ ★ (d)

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

★ ★ ★

... ●

...

... ★

★ ...

★ ★

★ ●

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★

50,000 15,000 ... 40,000 10,000

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ... ... (i)

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★

150,000 (g) 200,000 65,000 5,000

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ (f)

★ ★ ★ (h) ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

Acquainting gov-elect staff with office Transfer of procedures and information routing office (files functions records, etc.)

★ ●

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ...

★ ★ (c)

★ ★ ★ ★ (i)

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

... ★ ★ ★

1,200,000 0 60,000 100,000

... ★ ★ ★

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

50,000 60,879 Reasonable amount 75,000 Unspecified

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

★ ... ★

(b) ... 80,000 (j) 10,000 Unspecified (e)

★ ... (k) (m)

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

... ★ ★ ... ...

30,000 ... 100,000

★ ★ ...

● ●

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

... ...

(varies) (p)

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ●

... ★ ...

... ★

American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ★

★ Unspecified ●

Unspecified (o) Unspecified 250,000 (j) 100,000

★ ★

★ ★

★ ●

★ ★ ★ (d) ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ★

... ★

... ★

... ★ ...

... ★ ★ · (a)

★ (n) ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ (a) ★

★ ★

★ ★ ●

★ ● ● ●

★ ●

★ ★

...

★ (i)

★ (i) ★

★ ★ ●

★ ★ ★

... ★

★ ★ ●

See footnotes at end of table.

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GOVERNORS

THE GOVERNORS: PROVISIONS AND PROCEDURES FOR TRANSITION — Continued Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey, December 2004. Key: . . .—No provisions or procedures. ★—Formal provisions or procedures. —No formal provisions, occurs informally. N.A.—Not applicable. (a) Governor usually hires several incoming key staff during transition. (b) Legislature required to make appropriation; no dollar amount stated in legislation. (c) In Louisiana—Statute directs the records and associated historical records of any governor to be transferred to the custody of the state archivist. (d) Pertains only to funds. (e) Determined in budget. (f) No unclassified employees are made available; however, a list of civil

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service employees is made available within 60 days. (g) Transition funds are used by both the incoming and outgoing administrations. (h) The $65,000 may be used to rent space. (i) Activity is traditional and routine, although there is no specific statutory provision. (j) Inaugural expenses are paid from this amount. (k) New governor can submit supplemental budget. (l) Varies. (m) Responsible for submitting budget for coming biennium. (n) Can submit reprogramming or supplemental appropriation measure for current fiscal year. (o) Appropriations given upon the request of governor-elect. (p) Governor-elect entitled to 70% of Governor’s salary.


The Council of State Governments

H H H H H H S (k) H H H H H H H H

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ (d) ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ (d) ★

★ (n) H ... S 2/3 mbrs. present ★ SS ★ ………………………..………………………………………………...………...(o)……………..………………...……………………………………………………………………......... ★ H ... S ... 2/3 mbrs. present LG ★ ★ H 1/4 mbrs. (p) S ★ 2/3 mbrs. LG ... ★ H 2/3 mbrs. S ★ 2/3 mbrs. LG ...

Massachusetts ................. Michigan .......................... Minnesota ........................ Mississippi ....................... Missouri ...........................

Montana ........................... Nebraska .......................... Nevada .............................. New Hampshire ............... New Jersey .......................

New Mexico ..................... New York .......................... North Carolina ................ North Dakota .................. Ohio ..................................

Oklahoma ........................ Oregon .............................. Pennsylvania ................... Rhode Island ................... South Carolina ................

See footnotes at end of table.

H H H H H

maj. mbrs. maj. mbrs. ... maj. mbrs. maj. mbrs.

2/3 mbrs. maj. mbrs. maj. mbrs. ... maj. mbrs.

maj. mbrs. maj. mbrs. maj. mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. present ...

. . . (m) ... 2/3 mbrs. elected ... maj. mbrs.

S S S S S

S (l) S S S

S S (i) S S (j)

S S S S S

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ (l) ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ (j)

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. present 2/3 mbrs. present 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. present

2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. of sup.court 2/3 mbrs. ... 2/3 mbrs.

... 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. present 2/3 mbrs. present (j)

2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. present 2/3 mbrs. elected 2/3 mbrs. present 2/3 mbrs.

2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs.

LG LG LG LG LG

LG LG LG PS PS

LG LG LG LG LG

LG LG LG PS LG

LG LG LG LG LG

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ... ★

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ (h) ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ... ★ ★ (g)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

S S S S S

LG LG LG LG LG

Kansas .............................. Kentucky .......................... Louisiana ......................... Maine ................................ Maryland .........................

maj. mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. ...

2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs.

H H H H H

★ ★ ★ ★ (f) ★ (e)

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ (u) ★

S S S S S

LG LG SS LG LG

Hawaii .............................. Idaho ................................. Illinois ............................... Indiana ............................. Iowa ..................................

maj. mbrs. ... 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. ...

Majority of elected mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs.

H H H H H

... (c) ★ (e) ★ ...

Legislature may call special session for impeachment

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

S H S S S

Vote required for conviction

Official who serves as acting governor if governor impeached (b)

Colorado .......................... Connecticut ...................... Delaware .......................... Florida .............................. Georgia .............................

maj. mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. maj. mbrs. maj. mbrs. ...

Chief justice presides at impeachment trial (a)

H S H H H

Vote required for impeachment

Legislative body which conducts impeachment trial

★ ★ ★ (d) ★ ★

Legislative body which holds power of impeachment

Alabama ........................... Alaska ............................... Arizona ............................. Arkansas .......................... California .........................

State or other jurisdiction

Governor and other state executive and judicial officers subject to impeachment

Table 4.8 IMPEACHMENT PROVISIONS IN THE STATES

EXECUTIVE BRANCH

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Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey December 2004. Key: ★—Yes; provision for. . . .—Not specified, or no provision for. H—House or Assembly (lower chamber). S—Senate. LG—Lieutenant Governor PS—President or Speaker of the Senate SS—Secretary of state. (a) Presiding justice of state court of last resort. In many states, provision indicates that chief justice presides only on occasion of impeachment of governor. (b) For provisions on official next in line on succession if governor is convicted and removed from office, refer to Chapter 4, “The Governors.” (c) An appointed Supreme Court justice presides. (d) With exception of certain judicial officers. In Arizona and Washington - justices of courts not of record. In Nevada and Utah - justices of the peace. In North Dakota and South Dakota - county judges, justices of the peace, and police magistrates. In Oklahoma - all judicial officers not serving on the Supreme Court. (e) Should the Chief Justice be on trial, or otherwise disqualified, the Senate shall elect a judge of the Supreme Court to preside. (f) Except in a trial of the chief justice, in which case the governor shall preside. (g) Special sessions of the General Assembly shall be limited to a period of 40 days unless extended by 3/5 vote of each house and approved by the Governor or unless at the expiration of such period an impeachment trial

★ ★ ★ ... ...

of some officer of state government is pending, in which event the House shall adjourn and the Senate shall remain in session until such trial is completed. (h) In Louisiana - not specified; both the governor and the legislature appear to have authority to call a special session for impeachment. (i) House elects three members to prosecute impeachment. (j) All impeachments are tried before the state Supreme Court, except that the governor or a member of the Supreme Court is tried by a special commission of seven eminent jurists to be elected by the Senate. A vote of 5/ 7 of the court of special commission is necessary to convict. (k) Unicameral legislature; members use the title “senator”. (l) Court of impeachment is composed of chief justice and supreme court. A vote of 2/3 of the court is necessary to convict. (m) No statute, simple majority is the assumption. (n) Includes justices of Supreme Court. Other judicial officers not subject to impeachment.seven eminent jurists to be elected by the Senate. A vote of 5/7 of the court of special commission is necessary to convict. (o) No provision for impeachment. Public officers may be tried for incompetence, corruption, malfeasance, or delinquency in office in same manner as criminal offenses. (p) Vote of 2/3 members required for an impeachment of the governor. (q) Vote of 2/3 of members sworn to try the officer impeached. (r) Removal of elected officials by recall procedure only. (s) Governor, lieutenant governor. (t) Governor and Supreme Court justices. (u) Judges not included.

LG LG PS LG SS

(t) H 2/3 mbrs. S ★ 3/4 mbrs. SS ★ ………………………………………………………………………...….……….(r)…………………………………………..………………………………………....................................

2/3 mbrs. present 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs.

Puerto Rico ...................... U.S. Virgin Islands ..........

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

………………………………………………………………………...….……….(r)…………………………………………..……………………………………….................................... (s) H 2/3 mbrs. S ★ 2/3 mbrs. ... ... ………………………………………………………………………...….……….(r)…………………………………………..……………………………………….................................... ★ H 2/3 mbrs. S ... 2/3 mbrs. LG ...

S S S S S

LG PS LG LG LG

Dist. of Columbia ............ American Samoa ............. Guam ................................ No. Mariana Islands .......

... maj. mbrs. ... maj. mbrs. 2/3 mbrs.

2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. (q) 2/3 mbrs. present 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. present

H H H H H

★ ★ ... ★ ...

Legislature may call special session for impeachment

★ ★ (d) ★ ★ ★

S S S S S

Vote required for conviction

Official who serves as acting governor if governor impeached (b)

Virginia ............................ Washington ...................... West Virginia ................... Wisconsin ......................... Wyoming ..........................

maj. mbrs. maj. mbrs. maj. mbrs. 2/3 mbrs. 2/3 mbrs.

Chief justice presides at impeachment trial (a)

H H H H H

Vote required for impeachment

Legislative body which conducts impeachment trial

★ (d) ★ ★ ★ (d) ★

Legislative body which holds power of impeachment

South Dakota ................... Tennessee ......................... Texas ................................. Utah .................................. Vermont ...........................

State or other jurisdiction

Governor and other state executive and judicial officers subject to impeachment

IMPEACHMENT PROVISIONS IN THE STATES —Continued

EXECUTIVE BRANCH


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

State or other jurisdiction

Governor

Lt. Governor

Secretary of state

Attorney general

Treasurer

Auditor

Comptroller

Education

Agriculture

Labor

Insurance

Table 4.9 CONSTITUTIONAL AND STATUTORY PROVISIONS FOR NUMBER OF CONSECUTIVE TERMS OF ELECTED STATE OFFICIALS (All terms last four years unless otherwise noted)

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

2 2 (a) 2 (a) 2 2

2 2 (e) 2 2

2 (b) 2 (a) 2 2

2 ... 2 (a) 2 2

2 (w) 2 (a) 2 2

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... 2

... ... 2 (a) ... 2

2 ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

2 N 2 (f) 2 2 (a)

2 N 2 2 N

2 N ... ... N

2 N N 2 N

2 N N N (g) ...

... ... N ... ...

... N ... 2 ...

... ... ... N N

... ... ... N N

... ... ... ... N

... ... N (g) N

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

2 N N (h) N

2 N N 2 N

(b) N N 2 N

... N N ... N

... 2 N (h) N

... ... ... ... N

... N N 2 (i) ...

... N ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

2 2 2 (a) 2 (a) 2 (a)

N 2 N (k) 2

N 2 N ... ...

N 2 N (j) N

... 2 N ... ...

... 2 ... ... ...

... ... ... ... N

... ... N ... ...

... 2 N ... ...

... 2 ... ... ...

... ... N ... ...

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

N 2 N 2 (f) 2 (f)

N 2 N 2 (a) N

N 2 N N N

2 2 N N N

N ... (l) N 2 (f)

N ... N N N

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... (m) ... ...

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

2 (n) 2 (a) 2 (o) 2 (a)

2 (n) 2 (a) 2 (k) (k)

2 (n) N 2 ... ...

2 (n) N 2 ... ...

... 2 (a) 2 ... ...

N 2 (a) ... ... ...

... ... 2 ... ...

2 (n) ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

2 (a) N 2 (a) N 2 (a)

2 (a) N (b) N 2

2 (a) ... N N (q) 2

2 (a) N N N (q) 2

2 (a) ... N N 2

2 (a) N (c) N N 2

... N ... ... ...

... ... N N ...

... ... N N (q)(r) ...

... ... N N (q) ...

... ... N N ...

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

2 (a) (h) 2 2 2 (a)

N (d) 2 2 (a) 2

... (h) ... 2 (a) N

N N 2 (a) 2 (a) N

2 (a) (h) 2 (s) 2 (a) N

N ... 2 (a) ... ...

... ... ... ... N

2 (a) ... ... ... N

... ... ... ... N

2 (a) ... ... ... ...

N ... ... ... ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

2 (a) 2 (a) N N (o)

2 (a) (k) N N (o)

2 (a) ... ... (b) (o)

2 (a) (y) N N (o)

2 (a) ... (c) N (o)

... ... ... N (o)

2 ... N ... ...

2 (a) ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

(t) N 2 N N (n)

(u) N N (k) N (d)

... N N N N

(u) N N N ...

... N N N N

... N ... ... ...

... ... N ... 2

... N ... N N

... ... N ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico .........................

N (v) 2 2 (a) (h) N

2 2 2 N (e)

... (b) (b) ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... .. ... ... ...

... (p) (x) (p) ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... (m) ...

U.S. Virgin Islands .............

2 (a)

N

(c)

...

(e)

...

(e)

...

...

...

(b)

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

231


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

CONSTITUTIONAL AND STATUTORY PROVISIONS FOR NUMBER OF CONSECUTIVE TERMS OF ELECTED STATE OFFICIALS — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments surveys October and December 2004 and State constitutions and statutes, October 2002. Note: All terms last four years unless otherwise noted. Footnotes specify if a position’s functions are performed by an appointed official under a different title. Key: N—No provision specifying number of terms allowed. . . . — Position is appointed or elected by governmental entity (not chosen by the electorate). (a) After two consecutive terms, must wait four years and/or one full term before being eligible again. (b) Lieutenant Governor performs this function. (c) Comptroller performs this function. (d) Secretary of State is next in line to the governorship. (e) Finance Administrator performs function. (f) Absolute two-term limitation, but not necessarily consecutive. (g) Chief Financial Officer performs this function as of January 2003 and there is no limit to the number of terms. (h) Eligible for eight out of any period of twelve years. (i) State auditor performs this function. (j) Serves 2 year term and is eligible to serve 4 terms. (k) President or Speaker of the Senate is next in line of succession to the governorship. In Tennessee, Speaker of the Senate has the statutory title “ Lieutenant Governor.”

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(l) Office of the State Treasurer was abolished on the first Monday in January 2003. (m) Commerce administrator performs this function. (n) Eligible for eight out of sixteen years. (o) Serves two-year term, no provision specifying the number of terms allowed. (p) State treasurer performs this function. (q) The terms of the office of the elected officials are four years, except that in 2004 the agricultural commissioner, attorney general, secretary of state and the tax commissioner are elected to a term of two years. (r) Constitution provides for a secretary of agriculture and labor. However, the legislature was given constitutional authority to provide for (and has provided for) a department of labor distinct from agriculture, and a commissioner of labor distinct from the commissioner of agriculture. (s) Treasurer must wait four years before being eligible to the office of auditor general. (t) Cannot serve consecutive terms, but after 4 year respite can seek reelection. (u) Provision specifying individual may hold office for an unlimited number of terms. (v) Mayor. (w) Deputy Commissioner of Department of Revenue performs function. (x) General services administrator performs function. (y) Term is for eight years and official is appointed by judges of the State Supreme Court.


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

Table 4.10 SELECTED STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICIALS: METHODS OF SELECTION State or other jurisdiction

Governor

Lieutenant governor

Secretary of state

Attorney general

Treasurer

Adjutant general

Administration

Agriculture

Auditor

Banking

Alabama .......................... Alaska .............................. Arizona ............................ Arkansas ......................... California ........................

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE (a-2) CE CE

CE (a-1) CE CE CE

CE GB CE CE CE

CE AG CE CE CE

GS GB GS G GS

G GB GS G ...

SE AG GS G G

CE L L CE GB

GS AG GS GS GS

Colorado ......................... Connecticut ..................... Delaware ......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE GS GS CE

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE CE (dd) G

GS GE GS G G

GS GE GS GS G

GS GE GS CE CE

L L CE L (i)

CS GE GS CE G

Hawaii ............................. Idaho ................................ Illinois .............................. Indiana ............................ Iowa .................................

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE CE CE

(a-1) CE CE CE CE

GS CE CE SE CE

GS CE CE CE CE

GS GS GS G GS

(x) GS GS G GS

GS GS GS LG CE

CL LS SL G CE

AG GS B G GS

Kansas ............................. Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ........................ Maine ............................... Maryland ........................

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE (o) CE

CE CE CE CL GS

CE CE CE CL CE

SE CE CE CL CL

GS G GS G G

GS CG GS G GS (a-16)

GS CE CE G GS

LS CE L N.A LS

GS G GLS G AG

Massachusetts ................ Michigan ......................... Minnesota ....................... Mississippi ...................... Missouri ..........................

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE CE CE

CE GS (mm) CE CE

G GS GS GE G

G GS GS GS GS

CG B GS SE GS

CE CL CE CE CE

G GS A GS AGS

Montana .......................... Nebraska ......................... Nevada ............................. New Hampshire .............. New Jersey ......................

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE (o) (o)

CE CE CE CL GS

CE CE CE GC GS

GS CE CE CL GS

GS GS G GC GS

GS GS G GC N.A.

G GS BA GC BG

CE CE LS N.A. L

A GS A GC GS

New Mexico .................... New York ......................... North Carolina ............... North Dakota ................. Ohio .................................

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE CE CE

CE GS SE CE CE

CE CE CE CE CE

CE A CE CE CE

G G A G CE

GS (a-16) ... G ... GS

B GS CE CE GS

CE CE (a-9) CE CE CE

G GS G GS (a-7)

Oklahoma ....................... Oregon ............................. Pennsylvania .................. Rhode Island .................. South Carolina ...............

CE CE CE SE CE

CE (a-2) CE SE CE

A CE GS CE CE

CE SE CE SE CE

CE CE CE SE CE

GS G GS GB CE

... GS G GB B

GS GS GS CS CE

CE SS CE LS BA

GS ... GS CS CE

South Dakota .................. Tennessee ........................ Texas ................................ Utah ................................. Vermont ..........................

CE CE CE CE CE

CE (o) (y) CE CE CE

CE CL G CE (a-1) CE

CE CT CE CE CE

CE CL CE (a-9) CE CE

GS G G G CL

GS G (a-16) A GS G

GS G SE GS G

L SL (a-9) L CE CE

CG G B GS G

Virginia ........................... Washington ..................... West Virginia .................. Wisconsin ........................ Wyoming .........................

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE (o) CE (a-2)

GB CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE CE G

GB CE CE CE CE

GB GS GS G G

GB GS GS GS GS

GB GS CE GS GS

SL CE CE LS CE

GB GS GS A A

American Samoa ............ Guam ............................... No. Mariana Islands ...... U.S. Virgin Islands .........

CE CE CE SE

CE CE CE SE

(a-1) ... ... SE (a-1)

GB CE GS GS

GB CS CS GS

N.A. GS ... GS

GB GS G GS

GB GS ... GS

N.A. N.A. GB GS

N.A. GS C LG

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey of state personnel agencies, January 2004 and January 2005. Note: The chief administrative officials responsible for each function were determined from information given by the states for the same function as listed in State Administrative Officials Classified by Function, 2003, published by The Council of State Governments. Key: N.A.—Not available. . . . — No specific chief administrative official or agency in charge of function. CE—Constitutional, elected by public. CL—Constitutional, elected by legislature. SE—Statutory, elected by public. SL—Statutory, elected by legislature. L—Selected by legislature or one of its organs CT—Constitutional, elected by state court of last resort. CP—Competitve process.

Appointed by: G—Governor GS—Governor GB—Governor GE—Governor GC—Governor GD—Governor GLS— Governor GOC—Governor & Council or cabinet LG—Lieutenant Governor LGS—Lieutenant Governor AT—Attorney General SS— Secretary of State C—Cabinet Secretary CG—Cabinet Secretary

Approved by: Senate (in Nebraska, unicameral legislature) Both houses Either house Council Departmental board Appropriate legislative committee & Senate

Senate

Governor

The Council of State Governments

233


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICIALS: METHODS OF SELECTION — Continued State or other jurisdiction

Budget

Civil rights

Alabama .......................... Alaska .............................. Arizona ............................ Arkansas ......................... California ........................

CS G L A G

... GB AT ... ...

G GB GS GS ...

G GB GS (a-7) GS GS

CS AG A G CE

CS ... AT A G

G GB GS B GS

G (a-8) AG GS (a-7) GS ...

B GD CE BG CE

CS AG CE (a-2) CE (a-2) CE

Colorado ......................... Connecticut ..................... Delaware ......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................

G CS GS G G

CS GE CG AB G

G GE GS (a-2) N.A. BG

GS GE ... GS BG

C CE CG CE (dd) CE

CE GE AT A G

GS GE GS GS GD

G GE GS (a-28) N.A.

AB BG GS GS CE

CS CS GS A A

Hawaii ............................. Idaho ................................ Illinois .............................. Indiana ............................ Iowa .................................

GS GS G G GS

B GS GS G GS

GS GS GS LG ...

N.A. A GS (a-7) G GS

GS CE CE CE ...

A CE (a-3) CE (a-3) AT A

GS B GS G GS

GS A GS (a-7) LG GS

B CE B CE GS

CL CE B (k) A

Kansas ............................. Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ........................ Maine ............................... Maryland ........................

G G A C GS

GS B A BA G

GS GC GS G (a-11) GS

A G A ... A

C CG GS C CE

AT CE (a-3) AG C A

GS G GS G AGS

(m) GC GS G GS

B B BG G B

(n) B CE SS B

Massachusetts ................ Michigan ......................... Minnesota ....................... Mississippi ...................... Missouri ..........................

CG GS (mm) GS AGS

G GS GS ... AGS

G G GS N.A. GS GS (a-11) SE A GS (a-11) (d)

G CS (mm) GS A

G N.A. A A CE (a-3)

CG GS GS GS GS

G N.A. GS GS GS

B B GS BS BG

SS (e) (s) CE (a-2) A (nn) SS

Montana .......................... Nebraska ......................... Nevada ............................. New Hampshire .............. New Jersey ......................

G A (a-5) GC GS

CP B G CS A

GS GS (a-11) G GC GS

CP A ... G GS

CP A CE AGC (a-6)

CP CE (a-3) A AGC A

GS GS G GC GS

G GS GD AGC G

CE B B B GS

SS A (z) CL (a-2) A

New Mexico .................... New York ......................... North Carolina ............... North Dakota ................. Ohio .................................

G G G (r) GS

G GS A G GS

GS (a-11) GS G G GS

G GS (a-2) A CE ...

... CE G (r) CE

G GS (d) AT (a-7)

GS GS G G GS

GS GS A G (a-7) GS

B B CE CE B

G B G SS GB

Oklahoma ....................... Oregon ............................. Pennsylvania .................. Rhode Island .................. South Carolina ...............

A A G AG A

A A B B B

G GS GS G (a-11) GS

G G AG CS N.A.

A A G CS CE

GS GS AT SE (a-3) B

GS GS GS GB GS

GS GS GS G GS (a-7)

SE SE GS B CE

A A C F B

South Dakota .................. Tennessee ........................ Texas ................................ Utah ................................. Vermont ..........................

GS (a-15) A G G G (a-15)

A G B A A

GS G (a-11) G GS G

A A CE (a-3) A A

GS G B GS G

GS G G (a-7) A G

GS G B B G

SS N.A. (cc) A CE (a-2)

Virginia ........................... Washington ..................... West Virginia .................. Wisconsin ........................ Wyoming .........................

B GS CS A A

GB B GS A A

GB GS GS GS G

GB G B A G

GB CE (a-4) CE (a-31) A CE

GB AT AT A G

GB GS GS GS GS

GB GS B (a-8) CS G

GB CE (ee) CE CE

GB A CE (a-2) B A

American Samoa ............ Guam ............................... No. Mariana Islands ...... U.S. Virgin Islands .........

GB GS G GS

N.A. ... A GS

GB GS GS GS

(a-7) ... GS GS

(a-4) CS C GS (a-15)

(a-3) CS GS GS

A GS C GS

(a-7) B C GS

GB B B GS

G GS B B

Commerce

Community Consumer affairs Comptroller affairs

Appointed by: Approved by: A—Agency head AB—Agency head Board AG— Agency head Governor AGC—Agency head Governor & Council AGS Agency head ALS—Agency head Appropriate legislative committee ASH—Agency head Senate president & House speaker B—Board or commission BG—Board Governor BGS—Board Governor & Senate BS—Board or commission Senate BA—Board or commission Agency head CS—Civil Service LS—Legislative Committee Senate (a) Chief administrative official or agency in charge of function: (a-1) Lieutenant Governor

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The Book of the States 2005

GS (a-11) CE (a-23) G (a-11) SL G CE GS A G G (a-15)

Corrections

Economic Election development Education administration

(a-2) Secretary of state (a-3) Attorney general (a-4) Treasurer (a-5) Administration (a-6) Budget (a-7) Commerce (a-8) Community affairs (a-9) Comptroller (a-10) Consumer affairs (a-11) Economic development (a-12) Education (chief state school officer) (a-13) Energy (a-14) Environmental protection (a-15) Finance (a-16) General services (a-17) Highways


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICIALS: METHODS OF SELECTION — Continued State or other jurisdiction

Emergency Employment Environmental management services Energy protection Finance

Fish & wildlife

General services

Health

Higher education

Highways

Alabama .......................... Alaska .............................. Arizona ............................ Arkansas ......................... California ........................

G AG G GS GS

CS AG A G GS

CS ... ... A G

B GB GS BG/BS GS

G AG A G G

CS GB B (d) G

CS AG A A GS

B AG GS BG GS

B B B BG B

G (a-29) GB A BS (a-29) GS

Colorado ......................... Connecticut ..................... Delaware ......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................

CS GE CG A G

GS A CG GS A

G A A A G

CS GE GS (a-19) GS B

CS GE GS CE (dd) G

AB CS (bb) CG GS A

GS GE GS (a-5) GS A

GS GE CG GS A

GS BG B N.A. B

GS (a-29) GE (a-29) GS (a-29) GOC B (a-29)

Hawaii ............................. Idaho ................................ Illinois .............................. Indiana ............................ Iowa .................................

A A GS G GS

CS GS GS G GS

CS A GS (a-7) LG ...

G GS GS G A

GS CS (a-9) GS B ... G (a-6) GS (a-19) GS (a-5) G (a-6) A G (a-5) A A A

GS GS GS G GS

B B B G ...

CS B (a-29) GS (a-29) G (a-29) A

Kansas ............................. Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ........................ Maine ............................... Maryland ........................

CS AG A C AG

GS AG A N.A. A

B AG GS G G

C G GS G GS

... G GS G (a-5) GS

CS B GS G A

GS CG (a-5) GS C GS

C CG GS G GS

B B B B G

GS (a-29) AG GS (a-29) G (a-29) AG

Massachusetts ................ Michigan ......................... Minnesota ....................... Mississippi ...................... Missouri ..........................

C CS GS GS A

CG GS A BS A

CG ... A A ...

CG GS A GS A

G (a-5) GS (a-6) GS GS AGS

CG GS A GS (w)

G (a-5) N.A. GS (a-5) N.A. A

CG GS GS BS GS

B CS A BS B

G GS (a-29) CE (u) B (a-29) B (a-29)

Montana .......................... Nebraska ......................... Nevada ............................. New Hampshire .............. New Jersey ......................

CP A A G GS

CP A A GC A

CP A A G A

GS GS A GC GS

CP (ff) ... GC (a-5) A

GS (gg) A BGC B

CP A ... GC (oo)

GS GS AG AGC GS

CP B B B B

GS (a-29) GS (a-29) ... GC (a-29) A

New Mexico .................... New York ......................... North Carolina ............... North Dakota ................. Ohio .................................

G G G A A

GS (a-18) GS (a-18) G G GS

GS B A ... (a-11)

GS GS G A GS

GS CE (a-9) G A GS

G GS G G (a-19)

GS G G G (a-5)

GS GS G G GS

B B (a-12) B B B

GS (a-29) GS (a-29) A G (a-29) (a-29)

Oklahoma ....................... Oregon ............................. Pennsylvania .................. Rhode Island .................. South Carolina ...............

GS G G G A

B GS AG G B

GS G AG CS A

B B AG GB B

GS B GS (a-5) CE (a-4) B GS (a-5) G B GS AG (a-6) GB (bb ) GB B B A

(d) A GS GB GS

(d) B AG B B

B (a-29) A AG GB (a-29) B (a-29)

South Dakota .................. Tennessee ........................ Texas ................................ Utah ................................. Vermont ..........................

CG A A A A

CG G B GS G

A A B A G

GS G B GS G

GS G CE (a-9) A G

CG B B A G

GS (a-5) G B A G

GS G BG GS G

B B B B N.A.

GS (a-29) G (a-29) B (a-29) GS (a-29) G (a-29)

Virginia ........................... Washington ..................... West Virginia .................. Wisconsin ........................ Wyoming .........................

GB A GS A G

GB A GS A GS

GB A GS A A

GB GS GS (a-13) A GS

GB GS GS (a-5) A CE

B B CS A CS

GB GS (a-5) C GS (a-5) A

GB GS GS A GS

B B B N.A. B

GB B (a-29) GS (a-29) A GS (a-29)

American Samoa ............ Guam ............................... No. Mariana Islands ...... U.S. Virgin Islands .........

G GS G GS

A GS C GS

GB G C GS

GB GS G GS

(a-4) GS GS GS

GB GS C GS

G CS GS GS

GB GS GS GS

(a-12) B B GS

GB (a-29) GS C GS

(a-18) Labor (a-19) Natural Resources (a-20) Parks and recreation (a-21) Personnel (a-22) Post-audit (a-23) Pre-audit (a-24) Public utility regulation (a-25) Purchasing (a-26) Revenue (a-27) Social services (a-28) Tourism (a-29) Transportation (a-30) Welfare (a-31) Auditor (b) Responsibilities shared between Commissioner of Mental Health (GE) and Commissioner of Retardation (GE).

(c) Responsibilities shared between Section Manager -Central Account Service Manager (A) and Team Leader Audit Services (CS). (d) Method not specified. (e) The Director of Elections (SS) post is vacant, Secretary of State William Galvin (CE) is acting director. (f) Responsibilities shared between Director, Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health (CG); and Director , Division of Developmental Disabilities Services (CG). (g) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of Health and Social Services (GS) ; and Secretary , Department of Services for Children, Youth and their families (GS). (h) Responsibilities shared between Director, Division of Licensing, Department of State (SS); and Secretary, Department of Professional Regulation (N.A.). (i) The State Auditor is appointed by the House and approved by the Senate. (j) Responsibilities shared between Deputy Director of Mental Health (G) and Deputy Director of Retardation (G).

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EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICIALS: METHODS OF SELECTION — Continued State or other jurisdiction

Information systems Insurance

Labor

Licensing

Mental health & retardation

Natural resources

Parks & recreation

Personnel

Planning

Post audit

Alabama .......................... Alaska .............................. Arizona ............................ Arkansas ......................... California ........................

G AG A GS ...

G AG GS GS CE

G GB B GS AG

... AG ... ... G

G AG A A GS

G GB GS A GS

CS AG B GS GS

B AG A A GS

G (a-8) ... L (a-6) ... ...

LS B (d) L (d)

Colorado ......................... Connecticut ..................... Delaware ......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................

G GE GS G CE

GS GE CE CE (dd) CE

GS GE GS N.A. CE

GS CS CG (h) A

GS GE (b) CG (f) A A

GS CS GS (a-14) B

C CS CG (a-14) A

GS GE GS A GS

G A CG GS G

L (a-31) CE (a-31) CE (i)

Hawaii ............................. Idaho ................................ Illinois .............................. Indiana ............................ Iowa .................................

CS GS (a-5) GS (a-5) A A

AG GS GS G GS

GS GS GS G GS

CS A GS (l) GS

(j) N.A. GS (a-27) A A

GS GS GS G GS

CS B GS (a-19) A A

GS GS GS (a-5) G A

CS GS ... ... ...

CS CE (a-9) SL G ...

Kansas ............................. Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ........................ Maine ............................... Maryland ........................

C AG A C A

SE G CE G GS

GS G GS G GS

B AG A C A

C CG GS G A (p)

GS G GS G GS

CS G LGS C A

C G B C A

BG G A G GS

L CE CL CL N.A.

Massachusetts ................ Michigan ......................... Minnesota ....................... Mississippi ...................... Missouri ..........................

C CS A BS A

G GS GS (a-7) SE GS

G GS (a-7) GS ... GS

G CS A ... A

C CS A GS A

CG CS GS B G

... ... N.A A N.A

G CL CE (a-31) CE (a-31) CE (a-31)

Montana .......................... Nebraska ......................... Nevada ............................. New Hampshire .............. New Jersey ......................

A A G GC (a-5) A

GS GS A GC GS

GS GS G GC GS

CP A ... ... A

CP A GD AGC A (pp)

GS GS G GC A

CP B A AGC A

CP A G AGC GS

G GS ... G A

L CE (a-31) ALS AGC (a-9) L (a-31)

New Mexico .................... New York ......................... North Carolina ............... North Dakota ................. Ohio .................................

G G G G GS

G GS CE CE GS

GS GS CE G (a-5)

G (jj) ... CE (a-2) ...

G (kk) A A GS

GS GS (a-14) G A GS

G GS A G (a-19)

G GS G A (a-5)

Oklahoma ....................... Oregon ............................. Pennsylvania .................. Rhode Island .................. South Carolina ...............

A A G CS A

CE GS GS CS GS

CE SE GS AGS GS

... GS G CS GS (a-18)

B A AG GB B (rr)

B (a-28) GOC GS GB (a-14) B

B (a-28) B A CS GS

GS A G CS A

South Dakota .................. Tennessee ........................ Texas ................................ Utah ................................. Vermont ..........................

GS A B A G

GS G G GS G

GS G B A G

CG A B AG A

GS G B AB G

GS G B GS G

CG A B AG G

GS G A GS G

(a-15) L A SL (a-9) G (a-6) L G CE (a-31) ... CE

Virginia ........................... Washington ..................... West Virginia .................. Wisconsin ........................ Wyoming .........................

GB GS C A A

SL CE GS GS G

GB GS GS GS A

GB GS ... GS GS

GB A GS A A

GB CE GS GS G

GB B GS A GS

GB GS C GS A

B (a-6) SL (a-31) GS (a-15) CE GS (a-5) LS (a-6) CE (a-31) G CE

American Samoa ............ Guam ............................... No. Mariana Islands ...... U.S. Virgin Islands .........

(a-29) GS C G

G GS CS SE

N.A. GS C GS

N.A. GS B GS

(a-27) GS (qq) C GS

AG GS GS GS

GB GS C GS

A GS GS GS

(k) Responsibilities shared between Co-Directors in Election Commission (G); appointed by the Governor, subject to approval by the Chairs of the State Republican/Democratic parties. (l) Responsibilities shared between Executive Director, Health Professions Bureau; and Executive Director, Professional Licensing Agency (G). (m) Responsibilities shared between Lieutenant Governor (CE), Director Business Development Division (C) and President Kansas Inc.(BG). (n) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of the State (CE); and Deputy Assistant for Elections (SS). (o) In Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Tennessee and West Virginia, the Presidents (or Speakers) of the Senate are next in line of succession to the Governorship. In Tennessee, the Speaker of the Senate bears the statutory title of Lieutenant Governor. (p) Responsibilities shared between Director, Mental Hygiene Administration (A); and Director, Developmental Disabilities Administration, Department of Health and Mental Hygiene (A).

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CG (q) CG (t) GS GS (a-27) GS B GS (a-14) A GS

... CE (a-31) GS (a-11) CE (a-9) G CE (a-31) ... ... ... ... ... ... G CS AB

(a-7) GS G G

... SS CE (a-31) CS B (ss)

G CE GS L

(q) Responsibilities shared between Commissioner, Department of Mental Retardation (CG); and Commissioner, Department of Mental Health, Executive Office of Human Services (CG). (r) Responsibilities shared between Assistant Executive Budget Analyst and Director or Management and Budget. (s) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of State (CE); and Director, Bureau of Elections (CS). (t) Responsibilities shared between Director, Department of Community Health (CS); and Deputy Director, Mental Health and Substance Abuse (CS), same department. (u) The Lieutenant Governor currently serves as the agency head of the Department of Transportation. (v) Responsibilities shared between the five Public Utility Commissioners (G). (w) Responsibilities shared between Administrator, Division of Fisheries, Department of Conservation; Administrator, Division of Wildlife, same department (AB).


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICIALS: METHODS OF SELECTION — Continued

State or other jurisdiction

Public Public Solid library utility Social waste Pre-audit development regulation Purchasing Revenue services management

State police

Tourism Transportation Welfare

Alabama .......................... Alaska .............................. Arizona ............................ Arkansas ......................... California ........................

CS (a-9) ... A (a-9) A CE (a-9)

B AG B B GS

SE GB B A GS

CS AG A A GS

G GB GS A BS

B GB A GS GS

CS CS A A G

G AG GS G GS

G AG GS GS N.A.

G (a-17) GB GS BS (1-17) GS

B (a-27) AG A GS AG

Colorado ......................... Connecticut ..................... Delaware ......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................

C (a-9) CE (a-9) CE (a-31) CE (i)

A CS CG A AB

CS GB CG L CE

CS CS CG A A

GS GE CG GOC G

GS GE GS (g) GS GD

CS CS B A A

CS GE CG A B

CS GE CG G A

GS (a-17) GE (a-17) GS (a-17) GS B (a-17)

CS GE CG A A

Hawaii ............................. Idaho ................................ Illinois .............................. Indiana ............................ Iowa .................................

CS CE (a-9) CE (a-9) CE ...

B A SS G A

GS GS GS G GS

GS A GS (a-5) A A

GS GS GS G GS

GS CE GS N.A. GS

CS ... GS (a-14) A A

... GS GS G A

B A GS (a-7) LG A

GS B (a-17) GS (a-17) G (a-17) GS

CS A GS A ...

Kansas ............................. Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ........................ Maine ............................... Maryland ........................

(c) G (a-15) A C A

GS G BGS B A

GS G BS G GS

C CG (a-5) A CS A

GS G GS C A

GS CG GS G GS

C A GS CS A

GS CG GS G GS

A G (a-7) LGS C A

GS (a-17) C G CG GS (a-17) GS G (a-17) C GS GS (a-27)

Massachusetts ................ Michigan ......................... Minnesota ....................... Mississippi ...................... Missouri ..........................

G (a-9) CL CE (a-31) CE (a-31) A

B CL N.A. B B

G GS G (v) GS GS

CG CS A A A

CG CS GS GS GS

CG GS GS GS GS

CG CS GS A A

CG GS A GS GS

CG (d) A A A

G CG GS (a-17) GS (a-27) CE (u) GS (a-27) B (a-17) GS B (a-17) A

Montana .......................... Nebraska ......................... Nevada ............................. New Hampshire .............. New Jersey ......................

L A ... AGC (a-9) ...

B B G AGC ...

CE B G GC GS

CP A A CS GS

GS GS G GC A

GS GS G GC GS

GS A ... AGC A

A GS A AGC GS

CP A GD AGC A

New Mexico .................... New York ......................... North Carolina ............... North Dakota ................. Ohio .................................

G CE (a-9) CE (a-31) A ...

G B (a-12) A A B

CE GS G CE GS

G G (a-16) A A (a-16)

GS GS G CE (a-4)

... GS A G G

... GS (a-14) A A (a-14)

GS G G G A

GS GS (a-11) A G (a-11)

Oklahoma ....................... Oregon ............................. Pennsylvania .................. Rhode Island .................. South Carolina ...............

A (a-9) A (a-6) CE (a-4) CS (a-9) CE (a-9)

B B A G B

(hh) GS GS (ll) B

A A A CS A

GS GS GS CS GS

GS GS AG CS GS

A B A CS A

GS GS GS GB GS

B A A A GS

B (a-17) GS GS GB (a-17) B (a-17)

South Dakota .................. Tennessee ........................ Texas ................................ Utah ................................. Vermont ..........................

CE A CE (a-9) A G (a-15)

CG A A A G

CE SE B A G

CG A B A A

GS G CE (a-9) BS G

G G G GS G

CG A N.A. A A

CG G B A A

GS G A A G

GS (a-17) GS (a-27) G (a-17) G B (a-17) G GS (a-17) GS G (a-17) G

Virginia ........................... Washington ..................... West Virginia .................. Wisconsin ........................ Wyoming .........................

GB (a-9) CE (a-4) GS (a-5) A CE

GB B B A A

SL GS GS GS G

GB (a-16) A CS A A

GB GS GS GS G

GB GS C A GS

GB (a-14) A B A A

GB GS GS A A

CS A GS GS A

GB GB (a-27) B (a-17) GS (a-27) GS (a-17) GS GS A GS GS

American Samoa ............ Guam ............................... No. Mariana Islands ...... U.S. Virgin Islands .........

(a-4) GS G GS

(a-12) (d) B GS

N.A. (ii) B G

A GS C GS

(a-4) GS C GS

GB GS C G

GB GS A GS

GB GS GS GS

(a-7) B GB GS

(x) Responsibilities shared between Director of Budget and Finance, (GS): Director of Human Resources, (GS) and the Comptroller, (GS). (y) Elected to the Senate by the public and elected Lieutenant Governor by the Senate (CL). (z) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of State (CE); Deputy Secretary of State for Elections, Office of Secretary of State (SS); and Chief Deputy Secretary of State, same office (A). (aa) Responsibilities shared between Director of Budget and Finance (GS) and Comptroller (GS). (bb) Responsibilities shared between Director of Wildlife, Director of Inland Fisheries and Director of Marine Fisheries. (cc) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of State (G); and Division Director of Elections, Elections Division, Secretary of State (A). (dd) Effective Jan. 1, 2003 the positions of Commissioner & Treasurer and Comptroller will merge into one Chief Financial Officer.

GS (a-17) GS (a-17) BG GC (a-17) GS

GS GS AG AGC A

GS (a-17) GS GS (a-17) GS (a-27) G A G (a-17) G GS (a-17) GS

GB (a-17) GS CS GS

GS GS GS CS GS

N.A. GS A GS

(ee) Responsibilities shared between Cabinet Secretary, Department of Education and the Arts (GS); and State School Superintendent, Department of Education (B). (ff) Responsibilities shared between State Tax Commissioner, Department of Revenue (GS); Administrator, Budget Division (A) and the Auditor of Public Accounts (CE). (gg) Responsibilities shared between Director, Game and Parks Commission (B), Division Administrator, Wildlife Division, Game & Parks Commission (A) and Assistant Director of Fish and Wildlife (A). (hh) Responsibilities shared between Director, Public Utility Division, Corporation Commission (A); and 3 Commissioners, Corporation Commission (CE). (ii) Responsibilities shared between Public Utility Regulation (GS) and Chair, Consolidated Commission on Utilities (GS). (jj) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of State (GS) and Commissioner of State Education Department (B).

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237


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICIALS: METHODS OF SELECTION — Continued (kk) Responsibilities shared between Commissioner, Office of Mental Health, and Commissioner, Office of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities, both (GS). (ll) Responsibilities shared between Administrator Thomas Ahearn (G) and Chairman Elia Germani (B). (mm) Effective January 6, 2003 the offices of State Treasurer, State Budget Director and Commerce will be abolished and the duties will be transferred to the Commissioner of Finance, (GS), in the Department of Finance. (nn) Responsibilities shared between the Assistant Secretary of State (A) and the Senior Counsel for Elections (A). (oo) Responsibilities shared between Director, Division of Purchasing, Dept. of Treasury (GS), and Director, Division of Property and Management, Dept.

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of the Treasury (A). (pp) Responsibilities shared between Director, Division of Mental Health Services, Dept of Human Services (A) and Director, Division of Developmental Disabilities, Dept. of Human Services (A). (qq) Responsibilities shared between Director, Mental Health and Substance Abuse (GS) and Director, Department of Integrated Services for Individuals with Disabilities (GS). (rr) Responsibilities shared between Director Stan Butkus (B) and State Director George Gintoli (B). (ss) Responsibilities shared between Director George Schroeder (B) and State Auditor Thomas Wagner (B).


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

Table 4.11 SELECTED STATE ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICIALS: ANNUAL SALARIES BY REGION State or other jurisdiction Eastern Region Connecticut .................... Delaware (h) .................. Maine ............................. Massachusetts ................ New Hampshire ............. New Jersey ..................... New York ....................... Pennsylvania .................. Rhode Island .................. Vermont .......................... Regional average ...........

Governor

Lieutenant Secretary governor of state

Attorney general Treasurer

$150,000 $110,000 $110,000 $110,000 132,500 64,900 109,800 120,800 70,000 (s) N.A. 78,062 135,000 (jj) 120,000 (jj) 120,000 122,500 102,704 (s) 89,128 99,317 175,000 (s) 141,000 141,000 179,000 151,500 120,800 151,500 144,416 121,309 103,980 120,154 105,194 88,584 88,584 94,121 133,162 56,514 84,427 101,067 132,698 71,281 96,772 113,852

Adjutant general Administration

$110,000 97,400 71,032 120,000 89,128 141,000 109,190 120,154 88,584 84,427 103,092

$148,816 95,200 91,208 127,624 89,128 141,000 120,800 103,980 85,067 78,250 108,107

Agriculture

Auditor

Banking

$117,669 102,400 87,692 99,617 84,232 141,000 120,800 103,980 54,864 102,190 101,444

(mm) 93,200 84,302 120,000 N.A. 127,500 151,500 120,154 137,418 84,448 110,634

$117,669 99,200 85,758 108,105 89,128 141,000 127,000 103,980 77,867 89,960 103,967

$140,000 102,400 91,208 150,000 99,317 N.A. 120,800 125,000 110,321 120,536 105,958

Midwestern Region Illinois ............................ Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................ Kansas ............................ Michigan ........................ Minnesota ...................... Nebraska ........................ North Dakota ................. Ohio ................................ South Dakota ................. Wisconsin ....................... Regional average ...........

154,800 95,000 107,482 98,331 177,000 120,303 85,000 85,506 126,485 95,389 131,768 116,097

118,400 76,000 76,698 111,523 123,900 78,197 60,000 66,380 73,715 (b) 12,635 (ee) 69,579 78,821

136,600 66,000 87,990 76,389 124,900 90,227 65,000 68,018 90,725 64,812 62,549 84,837

136,600 79,400 105,430 76,389 124,900 114,288 75,000 74,668 93,434 80,995 127,868 98,997

118,400 100,900 66,000 98,046 87,990 105,576 76,389 91,232 167,504 123,204 108,388 (v)132,108 60,000 81,243 64,236 120,300 93,434 101,670 64,813 92,248 62,549 93,486 88,155 103,638

124,200 89,962 123,053 91,350 124,848 108,388 86,844 ... 73,715 (b) 89,918 129,617 104,190

116,300 115,600 74,431 83,070 87,990 87,990 91,362 96,804 124,848 135,500 108,388 102,257 89,086 60,000 69,874 68,016 66,851 (b) 97,501 89,918 76,787 108,914 109,948 93,451 93,952

118,900 87,126 80,000 80,185 114,444 103,627 84,999 74,004 54,974 (b) 84,302 94,275 88,803

Southern Region Alabama ......................... Arkansas ......................... Florida ............................ Georgia ........................... Kentucky ........................ Louisiana ........................ Maryland ........................ Mississippi ..................... Missouri ......................... North Carolina ............... Oklahoma ....................... South Carolina ............... Tennessee ....................... Texas .............................. Virginia .......................... West Virginia ................. Regional average ...........

96,361 77,028 124,575 127,303 125,130 94,532 145,000 122,160 120,087 121,391 110,298 106,078 85,000 115,345 124,855 95,000 111,884

45,360 37,229 119,390 83,148 91,075 85,000 120,833 60,000 77,184 107,136 85,500 46,545 49,500 (s) 7,200 36,321 (s) 65,714

71,500 48,182 118,400 112,776 91,075 85,000 84,583 90,000 96,455 107,136 90,000 92,007 135,060 117,546 135,311 70,000 96,564

163,429 64,189 123,331 125,871 91,075 85,000 120,833 108,960 104,332 107,136 103,109 92,007 126,528 92,217 110,667 85,000 106,480

71,500 48,182 123,331 117,893 91,075 85,000 120,833 90,000 96,455 107,136 87,875 92,007 131,060 (a-9) 118,644 75,000 96,763

76,336 93,223 127,624 123,069 125,000 129,130 92,972 (b) 111,400 81,672 90,143 109,162 92,007 95,148 94,832 103,285 75,000 101,802

76,336 124,402 74,462 117,892 109,907 171,724 100,131 (b) 106,800 112,356 104,672 ... 148,000 135,060 115,000 135,311 75,000 108,714

71,003 71,500 80,091 48,182 123,331 131,832 110,247 125,000 91,075 91,075 85,000 114,518 100,131 (b) N.A. 90,000 90,000 97,044 96,455 107,136 107,136 76,000 87,876 92,007 101,794 95,148 135,060 92,217 96,200 95,130 141,612 75,000 75,000 92,535 94,578

132,000 110,730 (a-4) 117,893 N.A. 85,400 52,449 (b) 127,179 ... 107,136 110,000 (a-4) 95,148 118,427 136,796 60,000 91,781

85,776 95,000 175,000 90,000 94,780 98,500 93,089 117,000 110,000 93,600 100,600 145,132 105,000 107,960

80,040 (a-2) 131,250 68,500 90,041 26,750 66,724 50,000 85,000 (a-2) 78,200 75,865 (a-2) 74,531

(a-1) 70,000 131,250 68,500 (a-1) 82,500 72,085 80,000 85,000 72,000 (a-1) 101,702 92,000 84,871

91,200 90,000 148,750 80,000 105,000 91,500 82,233 110,000 95,000 77,200 84,600 131,938 97,843 98,866

91,200 70,000 140,000 68,500 (a-6) 82,500 83,932 80,000 85,000 72,000 78,200 101,702 92,000 88,089

91,200 101,450 167,978 129,684 166,488 102,440 77,563 93,130 96,000 N.A. 86,736 115,000 99,424 102,084

91,200 150,000 ... 130,896 ... 82,098 (a-4) 109,582 94,451 123,756 99,702 115,000 89,094 97,476

68,796 96,000 131,412 130,896 90,000 85,072 83,932 87,464 131,560 101,844 86,736 115,000 75,766 98,806

... 118,073 131,412 126,996 85,302 ... 72,285 95,885 85,000 101,844 80,700 101,702 92,000 83,938

87,852 109,000 123,255 102,816 78,388 84,178 79,679 82,109 79,564 N.A. 86,736 115,000 73,484 84,774

107,960

69,375

81,006

94,710

83,753

96,593

106,337

96,089

79,982

90,000 70,000 80,000

85,000 65,000 75,000

58,199 68,152 40,800 (b) ... 76,500 85,000

74,096 54,000 76,500

Western Region Alaska ............................ Arizona ........................... California ....................... Colorado ......................... Hawaii ............................ Idaho .............................. Montana ......................... Nevada ........................... New Mexico ................... Oregon ............................ Utah ................................ Washington .................... Wyoming ........................ Regional Average .......... Regional Average .......... without California ..... Guam .............................. No. Mariana Islands ...... U.S. Virgin Islands ........

. . . 90,000 . . . 80,000 (a-1) 76,500

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey of state personnel agencies, January 2005 and January 2004. Note: The chief administrative officials responsible for each function were determined from information given by the states for the same function as listed in State Administrative Officials Classified by Function, 2002, published by The Council of State Governments.

60,850 82,025 40,800 (b) 80000 76,500 76,500

81,567 74,096 40,800 (b) 75,000

Key: N.A.—Not available. . . . — No specific chief administrative official or agency in charge of function. (a) Chief administrative official or agency in charge of function: (a-1) Lieutenant governor. (a-2) Secretary of state. (a-3) Attorney general.

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EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED OFFICIALS: ANNUAL SALARIES — Continued State or other jurisdiction Eastern Region Connecticut .................. Delaware (h) ................ Maine ........................... Massachusetts .............. New Hampshire ........... New Jersey .................. New York ..................... Pennsylvania ................ Rhode Island ................ Vermont ....................... Regional average .........

Budget $149,307 117,400 80,267 110,000 99,317 123,480 165,998 134,000 106,679 (a-15) 116,994

Civil rights

Commerce

Community Consumer Economic affairs Comptroller affairs Corrections development Education

$114,000 $131,511 65,700 (a-2) 61,672 (a-11) 91,598 (a-11) 61,913 96,461 110,505 141,000 109,800 120,800 107,541 109,756 N.A. N.A. 82,763 95,243 80,549 100,378

$150,000 ... N.A. 108,000 69,322 141,000 120,800 85,379 N.A. 74,090 74,859

$110,000 138,532 80,267 137,500 75,806 (a-6) 151,500 123,032 95,874 (a-15) 111,948

$117,668 $148,816 96,094 117,400 75,171 91,208 108,000 132,667 82,504 99,317 120,380 141,000 101,600 136,000 91,619 115,533 (a-3) 118,914 82,763 92,061 96,992 119,292

Election administration

$131,511 109,800 91,208 108,000 77,255 155,000 120,800 109,756 N.A. 79,373 98,270

$144,199 138,200 91,208 164,767 85,753 141,000 170,165 115,533 135,516 112,840 129,918

$113,464 71,800 67,330 (a-2) (a-2) 108,421 109,800 64,763 N.A. (a-2) 82,913

(a-7) 73,125 126,125 (o) ... 108,388 91,865 74,988 N.A. 77,250 83,081 86,984

225,000 79,400 118,000 137,280 159,885 108,388 141,977 77,436 190,008 92,248 107,432 130,641

115,128 (m) 70,242 (p) (e) (a-2) 64,099 26,460 45,198 (b) 51,188 103,504 61,980

Midwestern Region Illinois .......................... Indiana ......................... Iowa ............................. Kansas ......................... Michigan ...................... Minnesota .................... Nebraska ...................... North Dakota ............... Ohio ............................. South Dakota ............... Wisconsin .................... Regional average .........

121,000 100,900 124,200 93,561 69,147 79,950 126,175 78,000 ... 86,528 39,354 (a-1) 130,050 N.A. 121,500 108,388 (v) 108,388 108,388 102,710 N.A. (a-11) (tt) 60,000 117,312 73,715 (b) 60,611 (b) 73,715 (b) (a-15) N.A. 84,760 107,776 87,151 105,000 100,605 54,868 92,565

Southern Region Alabama ...................... Arkansas ...................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................ Kentucky ..................... Louisiana ..................... Maryland ..................... Mississippi ................... Missouri ....................... North Carolina ............. Oklahoma .................... South Carolina ............. Tennessee ..................... Texas ............................ Virginia ........................ West Virginia ............... Regional average .........

144,979 102,168 130,000 120,000 125,000 113,484 116,208 (b) 106,800 90,000 (a-15) 90,000 105,168 97,572 100,000 123,197 87,648 111,942

. . . 130,000 ... (a-11) 119,284 ... N.A. 141,755 99,446 125,000 65,707 (a-11) 80,210 (b) 116,208 (b) ... 90,000 68,268 97,032 N.A. 104,672 59,220 105,660 85,000 (c) 76,248 101,268 56,958 112,352 76,240 135,311 45,000 90,000 51,974 99,178

76,336 (a-27) 115,000 135,000 110,000 N.A. N.A. 59,328 77,103 82,939 N.A. N.A. (a-11) 112,352 104,867 85,008 74,226

118,921 124,402 (a-4) N.A. 94,533 (a-5) 120,833 106,800 86,364 133,330 77,000 92,007 135,060 92,217 110,469 75,000 103,874

110,404 95,000 80,767 118,700 85,450 115,000 102,648 N.A. (a-3) 91,660 78,000 102,003 72,704 (b) 86,346 (b) 72,000 108,400 (a-3) 97,044 N.A. 104,672 56,316 110,000 N.A. 124,698 63,864 95,148 (a-3) 150,000 95,130 130,466 98,506 75,000 75,213 100,259

(a-8) 111,172 (a-28) (a-7) 162,270 135,200 116,208 (b) 5,000 (j) 97,032 N.A. N.A. (a-7)( c) 101,268 (a-7) 198,284 (a-8) 96,952

170,754 122,295 198,000 112,777 191,075 180,000 165,000 234,000 149,124 107,136 95,898 92,007 101,268 164,748 150,931 146,100 148,820

53,775 53,218 100,500 81,000 N.A. N.A. 74,529 (b) (q) 59,088 92,892 73,957 78,000 N.A. (ff) 76,355 70,000 63,760

105,732 99,000 ((a-15) 121,200 (a-9) 88,500 80,704 (a-5) 79,135 92,436 101,769 90,000 82,400 98,605

98,124 115,000 ... 102,384 86,041 55,075 52,039 72,140 75,641 72,576 68,612 100,000 59,207 73,603

91,200 123,000 ... 149,688 100,000 83,932 83,932 109,582 100,818 112,272 86,736 115,000 142,320 99,883

91,200 (a-7) 108,753 130,896 N.A, 65,638 65,577 ... 74,158 101,844 93,542 106,128 142,320 84,850

106,508 98,000 140,000 108,000 100,000 65,546 68,839 80,000 ... 101,844 (a-15) (a-4) 92,000 89,872

... 106,270 123,255 80,000 78,388 54,912 50,232 74,460 83,389 112,272 78,571 131,938 142,320 85,847

91,200 136,000 131,412 127,260 90,000 83,932 83,932 109,582 95,594 123,756 101,769 135,000 111,240 109,283

78,828 (a-7) ... 149,688 95,000 93,088 98,800 96,791 100,818 112,272 93,542 115,000 142,320 99,934

91,200 85,000 148,750 166,050 150,000 80,425 80,425 109,582 126,071 72,000 138,361 103,785 92,000 111,050

76,248 (a-2) (a-2) 89,028 77,966 48,000 44,701 (oo) 65,000 101,844 44,454 101,702 60,000 77,197

95,871

79,737

108,207

82,859

85,695

82,729

107,439

108,262

107,908

73,336

88,915 54,000 76,500

... 49,000 60,000

75,208 52,000 76,500

... 52,000 (hh)

68,152 40,800 (b) 76,500

46,596 52,000 76,500

82,025 45,000 85,000

98,430 80,000 76,500

61,939 53,000 76,500

Western Region Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ California ..................... Colorado ...................... Hawaii ......................... Idaho ............................ Montana ....................... Nevada ......................... New Mexico ................ Oregon ......................... Utah ............................. Washington .................. Wyoming ..................... Regional average ......... Regional average without California ... Guam ........................... No. Mariana Islands ..... U.S. Virgin Islands ....... (a-4) Treasurer. (a-5) Administration. (a-6) Budget. (a-7) Commerce. (a-8) Community affairs. (a-9) Comptroller. (a-10) Consumer affairs.

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The Book of the States 2005

(a-7) 77,083 83,930 64,349 N.A. (a-11) 80,594 69,874 82,326 (a-11) N.A. 69,818

115,235 (a-3) (a-23) 70,000 ... 105,781 79,590 70,410 104,199 N.A. 108,388 (v) 79,636 94,869 (a-3) (kk) 71,340 (a-4) 124,779 (a-23) 44,643 99,621 74,442 85,102 77,512

127,576 96,193 105,000 93,887 130,050 108,388 (a-3) 76,404 73,715 (b) 81,619 116,158 100,876

67,150 40,800 (b) 76,500

(a-11) Economic development. (a-12) Education (chief state school officer). (a-13) Energy. (a-14) Environmental protection. (a-15) Finance. (a-16) General services. (a-17) Highways.


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED OFFICIALS: ANNUAL SALARIES — Continued State or other jurisdiction Eastern Region Connecticut ...................... Delaware (h) .................... Maine ............................... Massachusetts .................. New Hampshire ............... New Jersey ...................... New York ......................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... Vermont ........................... Regional average .............

Emergency Employment management services $120,000 72,600 64,667 86,063 71,482 126,000 124,705 115,000 68,311 N.A, 84,883

$117,669 84,900 N.A. 103,212 89,128 116,270 (a-18) 105,000 108,460 95,243 946,888

Energy

Environmental protection Finance

$107,635 49,924 80,267 99,162 70,005 92,610 120,800 102,944 77867 89,960 89,117

$127,250 (a-19) 91,208 117,678 96,461 141,000 (ss) 102,690 108,460 79,373 110,992

$150,000 117,400 (a-5) (a-5) (a-5) 118,190 (a-9) 134,000 (a-6) 83,491 120,179

Fish & widlife

General services

Health

(rr) $140,000 $144,481 87,400 (a-5) 102400 146,500 91,208 80,267 91,208 106,358 (a-5) 123,563 84,232 99,317 77,255 97,755 (pp) 141,000 (ss) 136,000 136,000 107,541 109,756 115,533 108,460 N.A. 110,321 74,090 87,006 112,287 102,369 103,007 119,815

Higher education

Highway

$150,000 $148,816 74,700 (a-29) N.A. (a-29) 180,000 110,410 66,779 (a-29) 121,900 116,277 170,165 (a-29) 87,355 118,300 134,639 (a-29) ... (a-29) 98,554 114,246

Midwestern Region Illinois .............................. Indiana ............................. Iowa ................................. Kansas ............................. Michigan .......................... Minnesota ........................ Nebraska .......................... North Dakota ................... Ohio ................................. South Dakota ................... Wisconsin ........................ Regional average .............

100,900 90,480 70,246 57,948 95,788 108,388 71,431 82,800 54,974 (b) 59,987 90,734 80,334

124,200 84,766 113,580 92,086 104,040 94,106 79,132 72,498 73,715 (b) 68,390 90,000 90,592

Southern Region Alabama .......................... Arkansas .......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................ Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ......................... Maryland ......................... Mississippi ....................... Missouri ........................... North Carolina ................. Oklahoma ........................ South Carolina ................. Tennessee ......................... Texas ................................ Virginia ............................ West Virginia ................... Regional average .............

125,000 75,000 103,728 119,156 51,496 (b) 81,058 74,529 (b) 83,000 73,872 80,568 70,000 80,730 82,896 75,504 92,269 45,000 82,113

81,999 77,997 120,942 117,219 95,110 103,526 114,400 59,072 115,000 73,518 106,103 N.A. N.A. 51,496 (b) 97,572 42,827 (b) N.A. N.A. 59,740 (b) 68,087 (b) 107,858 (b) 104,150 85,951 122,250 89,592 ... (t) 106,849 80,568 89,659 83,000 N.A. 82,000 112,500 90,132 132,000 112,560 95,148 93,720 120,000 81,120 132,000 110,469 117,297 134,280 81,720 85,000 (a-13) 88,159 68,318 93,346

76,336 (a-9) (a-4) 120,000 125,000 (a-5) 116,208 (b) 106,800 82,968 124,471 90,000 148,000 135,060 (a-9) 118,644 (a-5) 114,385

95,178 105,531 121,294 76,213 105,823 96,795 N.A. 104,000 (y) 100,749 87,000 111,127 95,148 115,000 111,865 73,404 92,633

65,686 110,224 74,462 90,663 109,906 (a-5) (a-5) ... 81,396 104,672 74,520 126,632 95,148 115,000 122,801 70,224 94,574

186,036 176,077 157,200 162,289 101,568 (b) 123,136 116208 (b) 188,057 112,356 142,027 180,000 116,199 140,508 112,352 155,636 90,000 141,228

146,380 76,336 125,679 (a-29) N.A. 130,044 272,950 (a-29) 233,000 62,312 (b) 202,238 (a-29) 107,858 (b) 150,000 260,000 137,635 135,000 130,008 312,504 135,452 N.A. (a-29) N.A. (a-29) 160,416 95,148 115,000 (a-29) 134,310 155,636 252,500 (a-29) 153,615 121,814

87,852 57,501 (b) 114,191 103,320 92,000 78,333 68,947 74,248 94,451 101,844 80,743 89,352 61,800 84,968

76,248 103,390 123,255 127,260 66,312 (b) 86,278 71,708 90,225 91,839 112,272 107,908 135,000 87,549 98,403

87,852 71,558 (b) 131,412 109,296 (vv) 84,178 65,546 (a-9) 107,494 (a-4) 105,903 115,000 92,000 94,445

91,200 121,000 129,418 123,072 66,312 99,091 83,928 109,582 89,302 101,844 89,993 115,000 95,790 101,195

88,032 114,000 129,418 130,896 (a-9) ... 71,847 N.A. 94,451 (a-5) 89,993 (a-5) 68,000 86,569

87,852 130,000 123,255 130,896 100,000 99,029 83,932 90,224 106,999 112,272 110,873 135,000 88,999 107,641

114,160 91,200 160,000 120,000 (gg) (a-29) 130,896 130,896 325,008 72,480 104,998 (a-29) 144,500 83,932 23,600 (nn) (a-29) 102,000 98,001 219,504 83,952 N.A. (a-29) 128,942 (a-29) 87,500 (a-29) 132,614 106,511

Western Region Alaska .............................. Arizona ............................ California ......................... Colorado .......................... Hawaii ............................. Idaho ................................ Montana ........................... Nevada ............................. New Mexico .................... Oregon ............................. Utah ................................. Washington ...................... Wyoming ......................... Regional average ............. Regional average without California ......... Guam ............................... No. Mariana Islands ......... U.S. Virgin Islands ...........

82,533

96,332

68,152 45,000 71,250

73,020 40,800 (b) 76,500

(a-18) Labor. (a-19) Natural resources. (a-20) Parks and recreation. (a-21) Personnel. (a-22) Post audit. (a-23) Pre-audit. (a-24) Public utility regulation.

(a-7) 116,300 (a-6) (a-19) (a-5) 131,100 51,831 90,090 (a-6) 74,919 (a-5) 111,286 ... 106,122 101,088 106,122 100,339 122,720 47,789 86,525 ‌ 46,509 (a-5) 80,000 ... 135,050 (a-6) (w) N.A. 130,050 104,671 81,620 108,388 (v) 98,324 (a-5) 108,388 67,549 98,465 (z) (aa) 75,972 102,511 ... 72,108 84,000 72,600 94,000 132,600 49,941 (b) 73,715 (b) (a-6) 54,974 (b) 54,974 (b) 73,715 (b) 38,396 (a-19) 96,445 68,390 (a-5) 89,918 89,000 122,021 107,776 112,021 129,617 116,158 52,125 97,449 89,559 86,702 85,683 108,950

... ... 123,000 130,896 72,2480 (b) 70,054 77,776 97,103 95,573 92,436 68,612 86,000 60,273 124,939

91,200 125,500 131,412 113,304 66,312 (b) 86,528 83,932 107,116 94,451 101,844 101,769 135,000 92,705 102,390

198,500 136,000 ... 149,025 95,789 261,494 121,551 N.A. 190,445 157,869 320,000 148,243

125,100

99,972

91,602

98,843

82,998

106,340

132,815

55,303 45,000 69,350

60,850 58,000 76,500

88,915 54,000 76,500

60,850 40,800 (b) 76,500

47,918 54,000 76,500

74,096 80,000 76,500

160,000 80,000 76,500

(a-29) (a-29) 135,595 (a-29) (a-29) (a-1) 99,954 (a-29) (a-29) 97,240 112,021 103,800

105,116 88,915 40,800 (b) 65,000

(a-25) Purchasing. (a-26) Revenue. (a-27) Social services. (a-28) Tourism. (a-29) Transportation. (a-30) Welfare. (a-31) Auditor

The Council of State Governments

241


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED OFFICIALS: ANNUAL SALARIES — Continued State or other jurisdiction Eastern Region Connecticut ...................... Delaware (h) .................... Maine ............................... Massachusetts .................. New Hampshire ............... New Jersey ...................... New York ......................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... Vermont ........................... Regional average .............

Information systems

Insurance

Labor

Licensing

Mental health & retardation

Natural Parks & resources recreation

Personnel

Planning

Post audit

$145,000 138,200 82,451 129,708 95,000 120,393 143,500 119,042 85,067 76,001 113,436

$117,669 $131,511 93,200 102,400 91,208 91,208 114,147 108,000 84,670 80,213 141,000 141,000 127,000 127,000 103,980 115,533 N.A. N.A. 89,960 74,089 96,283 97,095

$93,248 78,500 75,171 102,599 ... 120,380 (bb) 85,000 N.A. 79,456 84,120

(d) (f) 91,208 (u) 81,191 (qq) (ii) 105,000 N.A. 112,278 117,861

$122,719 109,800 91,208 (a-14) 96,461 116,277 (a-14) 115,533 108,460 95,243 110,938

$140,000 109,800 80,267 115,307 75,806 141,000 120,800 119,042 95,874 83,491 108,139

$107,635 84,666 80,267 N.A. 69,322 90,000 (a-11) 90,000 68,311 ... 71,100

(a-31) (a-31) 82,659 N.A. (a-9) 127,500 (a-9) 120,154 N.A. 84,448 93,974

118,900 (n) N.A. 63,665 104,900 94,106 85,946 (a-2) 54,974 (b) 43,493 (uu) 68,778

(a-27) 83,187 116,563 N.A. (x) 108,388 95,000 62,400 73,715 (b) 80,000 99,940 91,195

116,300 90,090 105,781 94,311 124,848 108,388 116,361 68,784 73,715 (b) 89,918 112,021 100,047

(a-19) (a-5) ... 74,802 84,142 ... 84,885 101,088 ... 51,272 72,100 N.A. 97,223 136,578 ... 96,424 108,388 N.A. 93,714 85,301 86,844 69,501 68,400 ... 54,974 (b) 73,715 (b) (a-6) 65,124 82,451 (a-15) 74,960 93,384 (a-6) 79,925 93,613 33,162

(a-31) 83,070 ... 98,254 135,500 (a-31) (a-31) ... 93,434 76,889 109,948 79,541

... ... 97,400 86,415 51,495 (b) 58,240 (b) 86,346 (b) ... 67,200 ... ... (a-18) 90,696 76,000 94,166 ... 50,774

134,566 89,348 (i) N.A. N.A. 98,196 100,131 (b) 142,561 94,128 117,438 125,000 (dd) 101,268 140,000 155,636 90,000 101,646

76,366 88,484 (a-14) 117,464 95,593 91,866 107,858 (b) 122,250 97,044 104,672 74,000 111,127 95,148 132,000 135,311 70,000 102,136

70,686 97,007 (a-14) 92,996 N.A. N.A. 63,772 (b) 104,000 84,876 81,149 74,000 103,000 93,720 115,000 113,359 74,568 80,196

137,498 (a-8) 152,305 87,862 . . . 127,238 96,000 115,000 1 (a-4) 117,918 (a-6) (a-31) 125,000 125,000 91,075 64,272 (b) 52,458 (b) 123,735 92,972 (b) 101,131 (b) N.A. 94,800 77,385 90,000 86,364 ... (a-31) 104,672 N.A. (a-31) 75,000 ... N.A. 98,476 85,214 88,496 95,148 N.A. (a-9) 85,968 (a-6) 96,200 122,171 (a-6) 141,612 81,732 (a-5) 80,400 97,866 66,296 98,628

87,852 N.A. 123,255 102,156 (k) N.A. 82,389 106,901 80,000 106,992 87,592 135,000 132,033 87,726

91,200 109,450 131,412 129,684 95,000 86,507 83,932 109,582 95,573 101,844 97,635 135,000 33,399 100,017

81,744 120,996 123,255 123,072 66,312 (b) 75,005 66,355 89,533 83,139 101,844 97,635 104,520 72,000 92,724

81,744 108,000 123,255 130,896 90,000 82,098 66,520 93,840 84,000 92,436 99,702 135,000 74,650 97,088

$113,464 88,200 40,134 115,595 64,036 108,045 127,000 107,541 68,311 74,090 90,642

Midwestern Region Illinois .............................. Indiana ............................. Iowa ................................. Kansas ............................. Michigan .......................... Minnesota ........................ Nebraska .......................... North Dakota ................... Ohio ................................. South Dakota ................... Wisconsin ........................ Regional average .............

(a-5) 81,971 126,175 96,425 146,017 125,990 93,910 110,160 60,611 (b) 107,682 95,455 106,236

118,900 108,300 79,852 88,505 103,618 89,958 76,389 92,086 112,199 (a-7) (a-7) 108,388 83,294 80,068 68,018 60,000 66,851 (b) 101,442 84,760 79,602 95,455 85,952 90,702 92,346

Southern Region Alabama .......................... Arkansas .......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................ Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ......................... Maryland ......................... Mississippi ....................... Missouri ........................... North Carolina ................. Oklahoma ........................ South Carolina ................. Tennessee ......................... Texas ................................ Virginia ............................ West Virginia ................... Regional average .............

134,565 112,371 115,000 N.A. N.A. 114,275 100,131 (b) 140,000 109,344 133,250 89,000 107,000 123,600 120,000 128,479 83,772 100,674

76,336 76,336 103,989 102,396 (a-4) 111,718 110,234 110,260 N.A N.A. 85,000 102,752 100,131 (b) 100,131 (b) 90,000 ... 97,104 97,044 107,136 104,523 98,875 80,749 100,074 104,423 95,148 112,560 163,800 125,000 (ll) 111,371 60,000 60,000 94,077 87,454

87,852 98,000 ... 124,836 66,312 (b) 82,098 98,520 109,582 90,878 136,416 105,903 135,000 79,100 93,423

87,852 109,650 140,000 106,356 78,388 78,250 72,285 96,900 89,922 112,272 86,736 101,702 79,795 95,393

91,200 121,000 131,412 127,260 95,000 86,278 83,932 109,582 91,839 72,000 86,736 135,000 67,909 99,934

91,676

97,311

69,921

84,993

97,401

90,180

94,907

56,556

80,280

74,096 73,020 40,800 (b) 45,000 75,000 76,500

74,096 45,360 76,500

67,150 40,800 (b) 70,000

60,850 52,000 76,500

60,850 40,800 (b) 76,500

74,096 60,000 76,500

75,208 45,000 76,500

82,025 80,000 55,000

Western Region Alaska .............................. Arizona ............................ California ......................... Colorado .......................... Hawaii ............................. Idaho ................................ Montana ........................... Nevada ............................. New Mexico .................... Oregon ............................. Utah ................................. Washington ...................... Wyoming ......................... Regional average ............. Regional average without California .......

101,208

Guam ............................... No. Mariana Islands ......... U.S. Virgin Islands ...........

74,096 45000 71,250

87,852 ... 123,255 121,200 63,156 (b) 55,994 73,015 ... 92,350 72,576 78,571 135,000 59,333 74,023

(b) Salary ranges and top figure in ranges follow: Arizona: Emergency Management, $93,918: Finance, $121,000. Hawaii: Employment Services, $98,112; Energy, $107,196; Environmental Protection, $98,112; fish and Wildlife, $98,112; Highways, $107,196; Information Systems, $98,112; Licensing, $93,432;Parks and Recreation,$98,112;Planning,$104,088; PostAudit, $98,112; Pre-Audit, $98,112; Solid Waste Management, $93432; Welfare, $98,112. Kentucky: Minimum figure in range: top of range follows: Election administration $84,950; Emergency management,$84,950; Energy,

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... 87,852 (a-6) N.A. ... N.A. 121,200 126,996 70,368 (b) 66,312 N.A. 82,500 93,088 108,908 ... ... ... 85,000 . . . 101,844 (a-6) 80,700 (a-15) 131,244 62,000 92,000 52,205 74,104

$84,950; Health, $162,504; Highways, $102,794;Licensing, $ 84,950; Solid waste management, $70,209. Louisiana: Minimum figure in range: top of range follows :Employment services,$79,622; Historic preservation, $69,555; Licensing:, $103,355; Personnel, $119,496 Planning, $97,552; Pre-audit, $97,522;Welfare, $104,374. Maryland: Minimum figure in range: top of range follows: Adjutant general, $124,671; Administration, $134,290; Agriculture, $134,290; Banking, $81,322 Budget, $155,893; Civil rights, $107,521; Commerce, $155,893; Consumer affairs, $113,206; Corrections, $115,766;


EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED OFFICIALS: ANNUAL SALARIES — Continued

State or other jurisdiction

Public Public library utility Pre-audit development regulation Purchasing Revenue

Eastern Region Connecticut ............... Delaware (h) ............. Maine ........................ Massachusetts ........... New Hampshire ........ New Jersey ............... New York .................. Pennsylvania ............. Rhode Island ............. Vermont .................... Regional average ......

(a-9) (a-31) (a-9) (a-9) (a-9) ... (a-9) (a-4) (a-9) (a-15) 94,779

Midwestern Region Illinois ....................... Indiana ...................... Iowa .......................... Kansas ...................... Michigan ................... Minnesota ................. Nebraska ................... North Dakota ............ Ohio .......................... South Dakota ............ Wisconsin ................. Regional average ......

(a-9) 66,000 ... (r) N.A. (a-31) 94,869 84,000 (a-22) 64,813 109,948 71,841

Southern Region Alabama ................... Arkansas ................... Florida ...................... Georgia ..................... Kentucky .................. Louisiana .................. Maryland .................. Mississippi ................ Missouri .................... North Carolina .......... Oklahoma ................. South Carolina .......... Tennessee .................. Texas ......................... Virginia ..................... West Virginia ............ Regional average ...... Western Region Alaska ....................... Arizona ..................... California .................. Colorado ................... Hawaii ...................... Idaho ......................... Montana .................... Nevada ...................... New Mexico ............. Oregon ...................... Utah .......................... Washington ............... Wyoming .................. Regional average ...... Regional average without California Guam ........................ No. Mariana Islands .. U.S. Virgin Islands ....

(a-9) 59,596 (a-4) (a-31) (a-15) 52,458 (b) 80,210 (b) 90,000 86,364 (a-31) (a-9) (a-9) 96,624 (a-9) (a-9) (a-31) 94,458 ... (a-9) 133,333 (a-9) 66,312 (b) (a-9) 108,908 98,052 87,210 (a-6) (a-15) (a-4) (a-9) 90,335

$99,290 73,297 77,438 94,266 77,255 ... (a-12) 90,172 85,067 79,913 84,686

$144,958 80,900 101,420 107,500 94,024 141,000 127,000 112,256 106,679 109,013 112,475

$86,667 $148,816 78,500 110,700 69,326 85,758 117,472 132,026 53,586 99,317 118,335 105,987 (a-16) 127,000 80,783 109,756 99,471 110,278 87,006 83,574 92,715 111,321 (a-5) 55,246 90,418 80,000 96,820 94,106 75,972 52,824 54,974 49,587 74,594 77,158

Solid Social waste services management $148,816 (g) 91,208 128,555 102,704 141,000 136,000 100,695 110,321 108,992 117,772

124,200 131,100 88,120 82,000 126,175 126,175 91,350 94,856 103,000 130,050 108,388 108,388 92,335 102,509 73,821 106,560 73,715 (b) 106,683 79,602 89,585 112,021 116,158 97,521 108,551

State police

$103,564 $145,000 13,800 135,200 58,573 80,267 (a-14) 127,596 75,806 89,128 83,350 126,000 (a-14) 127,000 102,944 109,756 68,311 124,114 79,372 95,243 80,191 115,930

Tourism Transportation Welfare $118,450 72,352 69,326 100,883 77,255 92,600 (a-11) 56,763 N.A. 68,785 86,357

148,816 102,000 73,590 124,970 89,321 113,566 136,000 115,533 ... 108,992 101,279

104,316 74,802 101,816 77,557 122,400 N.A. 80,850 66,300 60,611 (b) 53,518 100,347 76,592

117,000 88,120 104,497 81,200 109,242 (l) 96,025 69,874 73,715 (b) 75,587 114,303 91,454

82,750 86,941 93,400 119,887 94,077 113,544 80,210 (b) 80,500 76,200 88,442 72,000 79,403 127,056 85,000 117,686 66,996 91,506

86,801 110,404 76,336 139,310 82,000 76,336 96,577 87,862 94,110 128,417 51,153 94,260 124,137 91,400 124,070 130000 93,731 121,603 106,103 91,731 117,000 N.A. 88,686 120,957 106,433 (a-5) N.A. N.A. 42,559 (b) N.A. 78,000 83,241 104,042 87,734 93,242 87,740 115,152 74,529 (b) 86,346 (b) 107,858 (b) 80,210 (b) 107,858 (b) 107,350 70,116 118,935 126,500 64,253 110,600 N.A. 81,396 103,224 99,204 N.A. 80,040 119,315 92,757 104,672 101,914 87,832 100,134 (cc) 71,200 85,000 125,000 77,697 85,000 N.A. 82,281 123,874 129,484 132,000 80,295 95,148 N.A. 95,148 95,148 93,720 95,148 92,000 115,000 (a-9) 150,000 N.A. 102,000 136796 (ll) (a-16) 125,031 139,019 (a-14) 129,107 75,000 93,936 75,000 85,008 73,884 75,000 87,924 86,160 95,313 102,787 74,703 91,630

76,336 97,007 112,400 117,800 125,000 75,920 86,346 (b) 87,062 74,200 88,442 74,000 103,000 95,148 112,352 150,000 70,000 96,563

(a-17) (a-27) 130,290 (a-27) 121,400 62,052 153,595 114,920 125,000 N.A. 131,425 56,139 (b) 116,208 (b)107,858 (b) 137,635 126,500 130,008 88,188 104,672 N.A. 110,000 125,000 129,780 129,484 95,148 95,148 155,000 150,000 135,311 (a-27) 90,000 90,000 121,363 97,002

N.A. 113,025 108,744 108,905 110,000 56,742 66,009 92,052 65,557 92,436 78,571 89,004 73,439 81,114

78,828 98,450 117,818 126,552 77,966 81,120 63,686 101,528 N.A. 106,932 N.A. 115,000 85,800 81,052

78,828 109,000 N.A. 62,000 252,000 63,898 65,410 96,791 90,821 N.A. 73,915 115,000 87,000 84,205

91,200 121,450 123,255 130,896 100,000 130,000 83,932 109,582 (a-17) 123,504 110,873 153,472 77,002 111,782 110,826

88,032 85,000 ... 94,416 87,000 67,434 52,124 82,810 79,498 79,908 89,993 82,192 64,087 73,269

91,200 131,674 123,255 130,896 100,000 70,304 83,932 109,582 95,525 112,272 93,542 115,000 86,520 103,362 101,704

86,752

78,812

77,989

79,375

74,096 54,000 76,500

55,303 45,000 53,350

12,000 80,000 54,500

74,096 74,096 40,800 (b) 45,000 76,500 76,500

Economic development, $155,893; Election administration, $99,888; Emergency management, $99,888; Employment services, $92,801; Energy, $105,935; Environmental protection, $144,674; Finance, $155,893; General Services, $134,290; Health, $155,893; Higher education, $144,674; Information systems, $134,290; Insurance, $134,290; Labor, $134290; Licensing, $115,766; Natural resources, $144,674; Parks and recreation, $99,148; Personnel, $124,671; Planning, $134,290; Pre Audit, $107,521; Public library

91,200 135,000 123,255 130,896 85,302 15,646 83,932 110,050 N.A. 123,756 110,873 150,000 87,550 95,958 93,684

(a-14) 115,700 (a-7) 74,724 111,118 74,802 92,227 111,238 90,397 75,795 82,215 60,900 108,428 124,848 N.A. 108,388 99,911 104,671 57,591 82,923 54,380 58,812 66,000 70,368 58,968 (b) 73,715 (b) 69,805 58,444 75,026 84,760 97,526 91,312 89,000 82,473 94,001 74,844

$148,816 109,800 91,208 130,000 99,317 141,000 136,000 115,533 117,337 94,993 118,400

N.A. 84,816 87,450 126,450 117,818 131,412 103,308 125,244 63,156 (b) ... ... 83,075 83,932 76,700 . . . 104,567 ... 94,451 101,844 117,888 92,418 89,993 85,296 135,000 80,412 74,760 62,741 95,720 58,151

92,745

91,222

74,096 88,915 40,800 (b) 54,000 76,500 76,500

74,096 54,000 76,500

74,000 70,000 76,500

131,100 124,200 90,636 78,448 126,173 ... 91,350 72,000 135,000 (a-27) (a-1) 108,388 99,954 102,509 96,996 106,560 73,715 (b) 73,715 (b) 97,240 95,035 112,021 88,208 102,944 89,010

91,200 105,747 131,412 N.A. 66,312 (b) 81,182 83,932 103,257 108,178 123,756 107,908 (a-27) (a-27) 91,257 87,607

74,096 74,096 40,800 (b) 52,000 65,000 76,500

development, $107,521; Purchasing, $99,888; Revenue, $115,766; Social services, $144,674; Solid waste management, $107,521; Police, $144,674; Tourism, $115,766; Transportation, $155,893; Welfare, $144,674. New Mexico: Minimum figure in range: top of range follows:134,060.Ohio: Minimum figure in range: top of range follows: Lieutenant Governor, $132,350; Administration, $132,350; Agriculture, $122,574; Banking, $102,918; Budget, $132,350; Civil Rights, $112,320; Commerce, $132,350; Corrections,

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EXECUTIVE BRANCH

SELECTED OFFICIALS: ANNUAL SALARIES — Continued $132,350; Economic development, $132,350; Elections administration, $86,258; Emergency Management, $ 102,918; Employment services, $132,350; Energy, $94,182; Environmental protection, $132,350; Fish and Wildlife, $102,918; General services, $102,918; Health, $132,350; Information systems, $112,320; Insurance, $122,574; Licensing, $102,918; Mental health and retardation, $132,350; Natural resources, $132,350; Parks and recreation, $102,918; Personnel, $102,918; Public library development, $112,320; Public utility regulation, $132,350; Purchasing, $102, 918; Revenue, $132,350; Solid waste management, $81,598; State police, $132,350; Transportation, $132,350; Welfare, $132,350Utah: Minimum figure in range: top of range follows: Administration, $102,600; Agriculture, $87,500; Banking, $87,500; Budget, $102,600; Civil rights, $80,433; Commerce, $87,500; Community affairs, $94,300; Consumer affairs, $76,190; Corrections, $102,600; Elections administration, $41,433; Emergency management, $94,723; Employment services, $111,800; Energy, $64,750; Environmental protection, $102,600; Finance, $102,670; Fish & wildlife, $94,723; General services, $97,260; Health, $111,800; Higher education, $160,000; Highways, $111,800; Historic preservation, $80,433; Information systems, $105,500; Insurance, $87,500;Labor, $87,500; Licensing, $82,640; Mental health & retardation, $94,723; Natural resources, $102,600; Parks & recreation, $94,723; Personnel, $102,600; Planning, $102,600; Pre-audit, $102,670; Public library development, $80,433; Public utility regulation, $94,300; Purchasing, $97,260; Revenue, $94,300; Social services, $111,800; Solid waste management, $124,155; State police, $94,723; Transportation, $111,800; Welfare, $111,800 Northern Mariana Islands: $49,266 top of range applies to the following positions: Treasurer, Banking, Comptroller, Corrections, , Employment Services, Fish and Wildlife, Highways, Insurance, Mental Health and Retardation, Parks and Recreation, Purchasing, Social/Human Services, Transportation. (c) The present Secretary of Commerce forgoes regular salary and receives $1 in compensation. (d) Responsibilities shared between Commissioner Thomas Kirk, Mental Health: $148,816 and Commissioner Peter O’Meara, Retardation: $148,816. (e) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of State, $124,900 and Bureau Director, $102,143. (f) Responsibilities shared between Director, Division of Substance Abuse and Mental Health, Department of Health and Social Services, $121,100; and Director, Division of Developmental Disabilities Service, same department, $101,900. (g) Function split between two cabinet positions: Secretary, Dept. of Health and Social Services : $117,400 (if incumbent holds a medical license, amount is increased by $12,000) and Secretary, Dept. of Svcs. for Children, Youth and their Families, $109,800 ; if a Board-certified physician , a supplement of $3,000 is added. (h) Salaries represent those reflected for the position in section 10a of FY2004 Budget Act effective 7/21/2003. (i) Responsibilities shared between, Director of Mental Health, Department of Children and Family Services, $83,890; and Director, Substance Abuse, same department, $77,738. (j) Maximum salary available is $183,240; incumbent has requested reduces salary. (k) Responsibilities shared between Deputy Director of Mental Health, $92,000 and Deputy Director of Retardation, $92,000. (l) Responsibilities shared between five commissioner’s with salaries of $88,448 each. (m) Responsibilities shared between Co-Directors, Election Commission, $50,500. (n) Responsibilities shared between Executive Director, Health Professions Bureau, $54,274; and Executive Director, Professional Licensing Agency, $61,915. (o) Responsibilities shared between Lieutenant Governor , $111,523; Director, Business Development Division, same department, $86,275; and President, Kansas Inc., salary unavailable. (p) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of State, $76,389 and Deputy Secretary of State, $62,301. (q) Responsibilities shared between Assistant Secretary of State, $80,000 and Senior Counsel for Elections, $50,000. (r) Responsibilities shared between Central Account Service Manager, Division of Accounts & Reports, Department of Administration, $70,428; and

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Team Leader, Audit Services, same division and department, $57,948. (s) In Maine, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Tennessee and West Virginia, the presidents (or speakers) of the Senate are next in line of succession to the governorship. In Tennessee, the speaker of the Senate bears the statutory title of lieutenant governor. (t) Responsibilities shared between Directors, $84,876 and $86,2000. (u) Responsibilities shared between Commissioner, Department of Mental Retardation, $182,831; and Commissioner, Department of Mental Health, $126,871. (v) State Treasurer Position was abolished in January 2003. Functions now served by The Department of Finance, Commissioner. (w) Responsibilities shared between Director, Dept. of Natural Resources, $124,848 and Chief, Fish, $102,142 and Chief, Wildlife, $91,045. (x) Responsibilities shared between Director, Dept. pf Community Health, $130,050 and Chief Deputy Director , Mental Health and Substance Abuse Services, $114,000. (y) Responsibilities shared between Administrator, Department of Conservation, $82,800; Administration, Division of Protection, same department, $92,832. (z) Responsibilities shared between, State Auditor-$60,000; Director of Revenue-$92,335; Budget Administrator-$102,710 . (aa) Responsibilities shared between Game & Parks Director-$93,714; Game & Parks Asst Dir-Fish & Wildlife-$72,292; Wildlife Division Administrator-$66,323. (bb) Responsibilities shared between Commissioner, State Education Department, $170,165; Secretary of State, Department of State, $120,800. (cc) Responsibilities shared between Commissioners, Corporations Commission, varying salary levels for four commissioners, $72,000; $84,000; $87,875; and $87,875. (dd) Responsibilities shared between Director for Mental Retardation , $138,396 and Director of Mental Health, $140,000. (ee) Annual salary for duties as presiding officer of the Senate. (ff) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of State, $117,546; and Division Director, $86,811. (gg) Responsibilities shared between Chancellor of California Community Colleges, $185,484 and California Post Secondary Education Commission $130,000. (hh) Responsibilities for St. Thomas, $74,400; St. Croix, $76,500; St. John, $74,400. (ii) Responsibilities shared between Commissioner of Mental Health, $136,000 and Commissioner of Mental Retardation, $136,000. (jj) Governor Romney and Lieutenant Governor Healey waive their salaries. (kk) Responsibilities shared between Director of Fiscal Management, $84,000 and Director of Management and Budget, $94,000. (ll) Banking has this responsibility. (mm) Responsibilities shared between Kevin Johnston, $149,226 and Robert Jaekle, $149,226. (nn) James Rogers, the Interim Chancellor only accepts the minimum amount of pay permitted through FLSA. (oo) Responsibilities shared between Secretary of State, $80,000; Deputy Secretary of State for Elections, $79,885 and Chief Deputy Secretary of State, $87,876. (pp) Responsibilities shared between Director, Division of Purchasing, Dept. of the Treasury, $118,335 and Director, Division of Property and Management, Dept. of the Treasury,$110,000. (qq) Responsibilities shared between Director, Division of Mental Health Services, Dept. of Human Services, $113,566 and Director, Division of Developmental Disabilities, Dept. of Human Services, $101,498. (rr) Responsibilities shared between Director of Wildlife, David May, Director of Inland Fisheries, Bill Hyatt and Director of Marine Fisheries, Eric Smith. (ss) This is the statutory salary. The current incumbent’s salary is less than this amount. (tt) Responsibilities shared between Assistant Executive Budget Analyst, $66,912 and Director of Management and Budget, $94,000. (uu) Position vacant, authorized pay range $68280 - $105,834. (vv) Responsibilities shared between Director of Budget, $99,996 and Comptroller, $100,000.


LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS

2004 Lieutenant Governors’ Elections By Julia Nienaber Hurst Lieutenant governors lead today and prepare for tomorrow. Most have significant state leadership roles and all are first in line of succession to become governor. The 2004 election factors and results indicate this office is continuing to grow in influence and that lieutenant governors will further impact state legislative trends and governments. The results of the 2004 elections indicate the office of lieutenant governor continues to be on the rise in notoriety and influence. In this election cycle, the following four factors point to the significant and growing impact these officeholders will have on state government: 1) the rate of re-election of incumbents, 2) the vast government background and experience of those who ran for the office, 3) the outcome of ballot questions related to the office of lieutenant governor, and 4) ongoing consideration of the creation of the office in several states. These indicators were present in a total of 13 states covering every region of the country reinforcing the fact the growing influence of this office appears to be a consistent national trend, not an anomaly. In 2004, 14 states prominently considered questions related to the office of lieutenant governor and gubernatorial succession. In nine states, lieutenant governors faced election. Five of the six incumbent lieutenant governors won re-election while the four new officeholders have significant government backgrounds. Several of the newly elected lieutenant governors have been given more powers in the office of lieutenant governor than in history. In addition, three states’ voters approved ballot measures to deepen gubernatorial succession lines or retain powers in the office. Two more states are likely to create the office of lieutenant governor in the next 12–24 months. These factors warrant a deeper look at the growing importance and power of the office of lieutenant governor.

Lieutenant Governor Elections For the purposes of this article, a lieutenant governor is defined as the officeholder in a state or territory first in line for succession to governor. Fortytwo states and four territories have the office of lieutenant governor as successor; five states have the Senate presiding officer as successor; and three states and one territory have the secretary of state as successor. Twenty-four states and four territories elect the governor and lieutenant governor as a team in the general election. The remaining 18 states with a lieutenant governor elect that office separately in the

general election from the governor. Five of the six incumbent lieutenant governors running for reelection in 2004 won. The Indiana lieutenant governor, who is elected as a team with the governor, was defeated. The lieutenant governor had not previously held elected office and had assumed the office through appointment when the governor succeeded to the office in 2003. In addition, of the states with a senate president first in line of gubernatorial succession, Maine alone elected a new senate president since the sitting president was term limited out of office. In January of 2005, 18 of the 54 sitting lieutenant governors (33 percent) were expected to be women (New Jersey will have a vacancy). This is substantially identical to the 19 women of 55 officeholders serving after the 2002 elections. As of this writing, Republicans continue to hold more offices of lieutenant governor than Democrats with 30 being Republican, 23 being Democrat, and one being from the Popular Democratic Party. Between September 2003 and November 2004, four gubernatorial successions occurred, three due to gubernatorial resignations (Utah, Connecticut and New Jersey) and one due to death (Indiana). In January 2005, the Nebraska lieutenant governor became governor through succession when the previous governor was tapped for a presidential Cabinet post. By April of 2005, seven of the sitting governors had once held the position of lieutenant governor (or first in line of gubernatorial succession). These are the governors of Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Louisiana, Nebraska, New Jersey and Texas. Lieutenant governors have more power in 2005 than perhaps ever in history. In July 2004, South Carolina statutorily moved the Office of Elder Affairs under the direct supervision and authority of the lieutenant governor. Likewise, Utah’s Lt. Gov. Gary Herbert has a greatly expanded role being named the state’s head of homeland security and liaison for water, rural and infrastructure affairs. These duties are in addition to the state required role of chief elections officer. In Indiana, the newly created The Council of State Governments

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LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS Department of Agriculture reports to the lieutenant governor, as do the Departments of Commerce and Tourism. She is also the head of state Homeland Security and Rural Affairs.

Experienced Candidates Perhaps the growing powers of the office of lieutenant governor helped to draw the experienced field of candidates running for the office in 2004. The four new lieutenant governors have significant government experience, three as state senate leaders and one as a long-serving county commissioner. The experience of the lieutenant governor candidates who ran and won in open seats, and defeated one incumbent, is notably higher than the candidates in 2002. In Indiana, Lt. Gov. Becky Skillman has been a state senator since 1992. She previously served as county recorder and county clerk since 1977. She was the first woman elected to Senate Republican leadership and served as majority caucus chairman. Missouri Lt. Gov. Peter Kinder had been in the state Senate since 1992 and he served as president pro tem since 2001. He also served as a U.S. congressional staffer for three years in the 1980s. Montana Lt. Gov. John Bohlinger served three terms in the Montana House of Representatives and was in his second term in the state Senate when elected. On an interesting note, Bohlinger is a Republican who was elected to office on a team ticket with a Democrat governor. Lt. Gov. Gary Herbert was Utah County’s longest serving county commissioner, with 14 years of public service under his belt.

Ballot Questions In both Indiana and Virginia, voters approved Constitutional amendments that deepen and clarify the lines of gubernatorial succession. In both states, the reason noted for addressing the issue of succession was the realization, after September 11, 2001, of the importance of having established clear gubernatorial succession (Munster Times, Virginia Times Dispatch). Succession establishes which officeholder becomes governor if both the governor and lieutenant governor are unable to discharge the duties. In Indiana, the speaker of the Indiana House and the Senate president pro tem will be next in line of gubernatorial succession, after the lieutenant governor, until the General Assembly can meet and select a new governor. Virginia’s measure identifies additional elected officials who will succeed the governor in cases of “an emergency or enemy attack and until the House of Delegates is able to meet to elect a governor.” Two years ago, the Secure Virginia Panel 246

The Book of the States 2005

recommended this action. The succession line begins with lieutenant governor, then attorney general, speaker of the house, the chairmen of the 14 standing committees of the House of Delegates, then the Senate president pro tem, and finally the Senate majority leader. A Nebraska ballot question further indicated that voters are backing power in the office of lieutenant governor. By a margin on 61 percent to 39 percent, Nebraskans defeated an effort to remove the power to preside over the Senate from the lieutenant governor.

More Lieutenant Governors The gubernatorial successor in New Jersey has potentially more power than any other lieutenant governor or governor in the country. On November 15, 2004, New Jersey Senate President Richard Codey became governor through succession upon the resignation of the previous governor (New Jersey has no lieutenant governor so the Senate president is first in line of succession). Unlike any other state, Codey retains all his power as Senate president and acquires all power of the governor. This unusual “power” situation and the frequency with which successions have occurred in New Jersey led the legislature to put the question of creating the office of lieutenant governor before the voters in November 2005. It would be only the second statewide elected office in the state, the other being the office of governor. Polls in April 2005 show public support for the move and one state senator called the impending creation of the office “a seismic shift in state government.” A similar amendment may be placed before voters in Arizona in the next 24 months. In the 2004 legislative session, Arizona House Concurrent Resolution 2003 was considered. The resolution, if passed and subsequently approved by voters, would have changed the title of the state’s secretary of state, the office holder first in line of gubernatorial succession, to ‘lieutenant governor.’ The resolution passed the House but was narrowly defeated in a Senate committee. Press reports indicated the measure died only due to debate over when the title change would become effective if passed. Some said an immediate title change might give a greater advantage to the sitting secretary of state if she chose to run for governor.

Future Trends The constitutional and legislative power of the office, coupled with the initiative taken by the lieutenant governor and the duties given by the governor, may have bearing on lieutenant governors successes


LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS in future elections, both in re-election efforts and in runs for higher office. Certainly states will continue to refine the role of lieutenant governor, in some cases creating the office, in others deepening the gubernatorial succession lines, and in still others adding duties and powers to the office. The growing power and influence of the office may also continue the trend of drawing more experienced candidates to the office. Some would argue, as well, that the understanding and attention of the both the press and the electorate in a given state will affect the future of the office. Those who realize that this officeholder

can become governor at a moment’s notice may give more attention to the office and the accomplishments of the person holding it.

About the Author Julia Nienaber Hurst is executive director of the National Lieutenant Governors Association (www.nlga.us). Hurst’s nearly 15 years of state government experience includes time as chief operating officer of The Council of State Governments, four sessions as a legislative chief of staff, and time as a multi-state lobbyist.

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LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS

Table 4.12 THE LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS, 2005 State or other jurisdiction

Name and party

Method of selection

Length of regular term in years

Date of first service

Present term ends

Number of previous terms

Maximum consecutive terms allowed by constitution

Alabama ..................... Alaska ......................... Arizona ....................... Arkansas .................... California ...................

Lucy Baxley (D) CE 4 1/03 1/07 ... 2 Loren Leman (R) CE 4 12/02 12/06 ... 2 …………………………………………………..……..(a)………………….……………………………………………………. Winthrop Rockefeller (R) CE 4 1/96 (b) 1/07 1.5 (b) 2 Cruz Bustamante (D) CE 4 1/98 1/06 1 2

Colorado .................... Connecticut ................ Delaware .................... Florida ........................ Georgia .......................

Jane E. Norton (R) Kevin Sullivan (D) John Carney (D) Toni Jennings (R) Mark Taylor (D)

CE CE CE CE CE

4 4 4 4 4

1/03 1/04 (g) 1/01 3/03 1/99

1/07 1/07 1/05 1/07 1/07

... ... ... ... 1

2 ... 2 2 ...

Hawaii ........................ Idaho ........................... Illinois ......................... Indiana ....................... Iowa ............................

James Aiona (R) Jim Risch (R) Patrick Quinn (D) Becky Skillman (R) Sally Pederson (D)

CE CE CE CE CE

4 4 4 4 4

12/02 1/03 1/03 1/05 1/99

12/06 1/07 1/07 1/09 1/07

... ... ... ... 1

2 ... ... 2 ...

Kansas ........................ Kentucky .................... Louisiana ................... Maine .......................... Maryland ...................

John E. Moore (D) CE 4 1/03 1/07 ... ... Stephen Pence (R) CE 4 12/03 12/07 ... 2 Mitch Landrieu (D) CE 4 1/04 1/08 ... ... …………………………………………………..……..(a)………………….……………………………………………………. Michael Steele (R) CE 4 1/03 1/07 ... 2

Massachusetts ........... Michigan .................... Minnesota .................. Mississippi ................. Missouri .....................

Kerry Healey (R) John D. Cherry (D) Carol Molnau (R) Amy Tuck (R) Peter Kinder (R)

Montana ..................... Nebraska .................... Nevada ........................ New Hampshire ......... New Jersey .................

John Bohlinger (R) CE 4 1/01 1/09 ... 2 (c) Rick Sheehy (R) CE 4 1/05 (e) 1/07 ... 2 Lorraine Hunt (R) CE 4 1/99 1/07 1 2 …………………………………………………..……..(a)………………….……………………………………………………. …………………………………………………..……..(a)………………….…………………………………………………….

New Mexico ............... New York .................... North Carolina .......... North Dakota ............ Ohio ............................

Diane Denish (D) Mary Donohue (R) Beverly Purdue (D) Jack Dalrymple (R) Bruce Johnson (R)

Oklahoma .................. Oregon ........................ Pennsylvania ............. Rhode Island ............. South Carolina ..........

Mary Fallin (R) CE 4 1/95 1/07 2 ... …………………………………………………..……..(a)………………….……………………………………………………. Catherine Baker Knoll (D) CE 4 1/03 1/07 ... 2 Charles J. Fogarty (D) SE 4 1/99 1/07 1 2 R. Andre Bauer (R) CE 4 1/03 1/07 ... 2

South Dakota ............. Tennessee ................... Texas ........................... Utah ............................ Vermont .....................

Dennis Daugaard (R) CE 4 1/03 1/07 ... 2 …………………………………………………..……..(a)………………….……………………………………………………. David Dewhurst (R) CE 4 1/03 1/07 ... ... Gary Herbert (R) CE 4 1/05 1/09 ... ... Brian Dubie (R) CE 2 1/03 1/07 1 ...

Virginia ...................... Washington ................ West Virginia (d) ....... Wisconsin ................... Wyoming ....................

Tim Kaine (D) CE 4 1/02 1/06 ... ... Brad Owen (D) CE 4 1/97 1/09 2 ... Earl Ray Tomblin (D) (d) 2 1/95 1/07 6 ... Barbara Lawton (D) CE 4 1/03 1/07 ... ... …………………………………………………..……..(a)………………….…………………………………………………….

American Samoa ....... Guam .......................... No. Mariana Islands . Puerto Rico ................ U.S. Virgin Islands ....

Ipulasi Aitofele Sunia (D) CE 4 4/03 (f) 1/09 (f) 2 Kaleo Moylan (R) CE 4 1/03 1/07 ... 2 Diego T. Benavente (R) CE 4 1/02 1/06 ... ... …………………………………………………..……..(a)………………….……………………………………………………. Vargrave Richards (D) SE 4 1/03 1/07 ... 2

CE CE CE CE CE

CE CE CE CE SE

Source: The Council of State Governments and the National Lieutenant Governors Association, January 2005. Key: CE—Constitutional, elected by public. SE—Statutory, elected by public. . . . —Not applicable. (a) No lieutenant governor. In Tennessee, the speaker of the Senate, elected from Senate membership, has statutory title of “lieutenant governor.” (b) Elected in November 1996 in a special election when Mike Huckabee assumed the office of governor after Governor Jim Guy Tucker’s resignation on July 15, 1996. (c) Eligible for eight out of 16 years.

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4 4 4 4 4

4 4 4 4 4

1/03 1/03 1/03 1/00 1/05

1/03 1/99 1/01 12/00 1/03

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/08 1/09

1/07 1/07 1/09 12/08 1/07

... ... ... 1 ...

... 1 1 ... ...

... 2 ... 2 ...

2 ... 2 ... 2

(d) In West Virginia, the President of the Senate and the Lieutenant Governor are one in the same. The legislature provided in statute the title of Lieutenant Governor upon the Senate President. The Senate President serves 2 year terms, elected by the Senate on the first day of the first session of each two year legislative term. (e) Lt. Governor Sheehy was appointed to the position of Lieutenant Governor January 24, 2005 by Governor Heineman. (f) Lt. Governor Sunia was appointed to the position of Lieutenant Governor in April 2003 by Governor Togiola Tulafono. (g) Senate President pro Tempore Sullivan took office after Lieutenant Governor Rell was sworn in as governor on July 1, 2004 after Governor John Rowland resigned.


LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS

Table 4.13 LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS: QUALIFICATIONS AND TERMS State or other jurisdiction Alabama ............................. Alaska ................................. Arizona ............................... Arkansas ............................ California ...........................

Minimum age

State citizen (years)

U.S. citizen (years) (a)

State resident (years) (b)

Qualified voter (years)

Length of term (years)

Maximum consecutive terms allowed

30 7 10 7 ★ 4 2 30 ... 7 7 ★ 4 2 ......................…………………………..........……....(c)….……………………………………………………..... 30 7 ★ 7 ... 4 2 18 ★ ★ 5 ★ 4 2

Colorado ............................ Connecticut ........................ Delaware ............................ Florida ................................ Georgia ...............................

30 ... 30 30 30

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ 12 ★ 15

2 ★ 16 7 6

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

4 4 4 4 4

2 ... 2 2 ...

Hawaii ................................ Idaho ................................... Illinois ................................. Indiana ............................... Iowa ....................................

30 30 25 30 30

5 ... ... 5 ...

★ ★ ★ 5 2

5 2 3 5 2

★ ... ... ... ...

4 4 4 4 4

2 ... ... 2 ...

Kansas ................................ Kentucky ............................ Louisiana ........................... Maine .................................. Maryland ........................... Massachusetts ................... Michigan ............................ Minnesota .......................... Mississippi ......................... Missouri ............................. Montana ............................. Nebraska ............................ Nevada ................................ New Hampshire ................. New Jersey ......................... New Mexico ....................... New York ............................ North Carolina .................. North Dakota .................... Ohio ....................................

... ... ... ... ... 4 ... 30 6 ... 6 ... 4 2 25 5 5 5 ... 4 ... ......................…………………………..........……....(c)….……………………………………………………..... 30 ... (d) 5 5 4 2 ... 30 25 30 30

★ (h) ★ ★ ...

★ (h) ★ 20 15

★ 4 1 5 10

★ 4 ... ★ ★

4 4 4 4 4

... 2 ... 2 ...

25 2 ★ 2 ★ 4 2 (e) 30 5 5 5 ... 4 2 25 2 ★ 2 ★ 4 2 ......................…………………………..........……....(c)….……………………………………………………..... ......................…………………………..........……....(c)….……………………………………………………..... 30 30 30 30 18

★ ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ 5 ★ ★

5 5 2 5 ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

4 4 4 4 4

2 ... 2 ... 2

Oklahoma .......................... Oregon ................................ Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... South Carolina ..................

31 ★ ★ ★ 10 4 ... ......................…………………………..........……....(c)….……………………………………………………..... 30 ★ ★ 7 ★ 4 2 18 ★ ★ ★ 30 days 4 2 30 5 5 5 ★ 4 2

South Dakota ..................... Tennessee ........................... Texas ................................... Utah .................................... Vermont .............................

21 2 ★ 2 ... 4 2 ......................…………………………..........……....(c)….……………………………………………………..... 30 ... ★ 5 ... 4 ... 30 5 ★ 5 ★ 4 ... ... ... ... 4 ... 2 ...

Virginia .............................. Washington ........................ West Virginia (f) ............... Wisconsin ........................... Wyoming ............................

30 ... ★ 5 5 4 ... 18 ★ ★ ★ ★ 4 ... 25 1 1 1 ★ 2 ... 18 ★ ★ ★ ★ 4 ... ......................…………………………..........……....(c)….…………………………………………………….....

American Samoa ............... Guam .................................. No. Mariana Islands ......... Puerto Rico ........................

35 (g) ★ 5 ★ 4 2 30 ... 5 5 ★ 4 2 35 ... ★ 10 ★ 4 ... ......................…………………………..........……....(c)….…………………………………………………….....

U.S. Virgin Islands ............

30

...

Sources: The Council of State Government’s survey, December 2004 and state constitutions, statutes and secretaries of state web sites, January 2005. Note: This table includes constitutional and statutory qualifications. Key: ★— Formal provision; number of years not specified. . . . — No formal provision. (a) In some states you must be a U.S. citizen to be an elector, and must be an elector to run. (b) In some states you must be a state resident to be an elector, and must be an elector to run. (c) No lieutenant governor. In Tennessee, the speaker of the Senate, elected from Senate membership, has statutory title of “lieutenant governor.”

5

5

5

4

2

(d) Crosse v. Board of Supervisors of Elections 243 Md. 555, 221 A.2d431 (1966)–opinion rendered indicated that U.S. citizenship was, by necessity, a requirement for office. (e) Eligible for eight out of 16 years. (f) In West Virginia, the President of the Senate and the Lieutenant Governor are one in the same. The legislature provided in statute the title of Lieutenant Governor upon the Senate President. The Senate President serves 2 year terms, elected by the Senate on the first day of the first session of each two year legislative term. (g) Must be a U.S. national. (h) In order to be a qualified voter in the state (which is a requirement for office) one must be a U.S. Citizen and a resident of the State of Michigan.

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LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS

Table 4.14 LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS: POWERS AND DUTIES State or other jurisdiction

Presides over Senate

Appoints committees

Breaks roll-call ties

Assigns bills

Authority for governor to assign duties

Member of governor’s cabinet or advisory body

Serves as acting governor when governor out of state

Alabama .............................. Alaska (q) ............................ Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

★ ★(p) ★ ★(p) ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ★ ★ ... .............….....………………………..…................(b).……………………………………………….......... ★ ... ★ ... ... ... ★ ... ... ★ ... ... ... ★

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

Hawaii (r) ............................ Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... (a)

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ★ (g)

★ ★ ... ... (f)

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

... ... ... ... ... ★ ... ... ... ... ... ★ ★ ... ... ... ... ... ★ ★ ★ .............….....………………………..…................(c).……………………………………………….......... ... ... ... ... ★ ★ ★

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

... ★ ... ★ ★

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey .......................... New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ...................... Ohio .....................................

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ★ ★ ★ ★(d) ... ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ... ★(e) ... ... ... ★ .............….....………………………..…................(c).……………………………………………….......... .............….....………………………..…................(c).……………………………………………….......... ★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★(o) ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island (j) ................. South Carolina ...................

★ ★ ★ ★(n) ... ★ ... .............….....………………………..…................(b).……………………………………………….......... ★ ... ★ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ... (i)

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

★ (h) ★ ★ ★ (m) ... .............….....………………………..…................(c).……………………………………………….......... ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ... ★ ... ... ... ... ★ ★ ... ★ ★ (a) ★ ... ... ... ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia (l) ................. Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

★ ... ★ ... ... ... ... ★ ★ ★ ... ... ... ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ★ ... ... .............….....………………………..…................(b).………………………………………………..........

American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

... ... ... ... ... ... ★ (d) ... ... ... ★ ★ ★ ... ... ... ... ★ (k) ★ .............….....………………………..…................(b).……………………………………………….......... ... ... ... ... ★ (g) ★ ★

See footnotes at end of table.

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LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS

LIEUTENANT GOVERNORS: POWERS AND DUTIES — Continued Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey, December 2004 and state constitutions and statutes. Key: ★— Provision for responsibility. . . . — No provision for responsibility. (a) Appoints all standing committees. Iowa - appoints some special committees; Vermont–appoints all committees as one of three members of Senate Committee on Committees. (b) No lieutenant governor; secretary of state is next in line of succession to governorship. (c) No lieutenant governor; senate president or speaker is next in line of succession to governorship. In Tennessee, speaker of the senate bears the additional statutory title of “lieutenant governor.” (d) Unicameral legislative body. In Guam, that body elects own presiding officer. (e) Except on final passage of bills and joint resolutions. (f) Only in emergency situations. (g) Presides over cabinet meetings in absence of governor. (h) Conference committees. (i) As directed by the governor. (j) Under state law responsible for overseeing a number or policy areas in state government through councils and committees, which he chairs.

(k) The Lieutenant Governor is an automatic member of the Governor’s cabinet. (l) In West Virginia, the President of the Senate and the Lieutenant Governor are one in the same. The legislature provided in statute the title of Lieutenant Governor upon the Senate President. The Senate President serves 2 year terms, elected by the Senate on the first day of the first session of each two year legislative term. (m) If assigned. (n) Only for joint sessions. (o) With respect to procedural matters, not legislation. (p) The Lieutenant Governor serves on the Assignment Committee (five members) and in such capacity has input in the appointment of committees and assigning of bills. (q) The Lieutenant Governor oversees the Division of Elections; signs and files administrative regulations; publishes Administrative Code and Online Public Notice System; Regulates use of State Seal; Presides during the organization of first session of each legislature; certify ballot measures and writes ballot summaries; authenticate supplements to Alaska Statutes; chairs the Alaska Historical Commission; serves on the Alaska Workforce Board; distributes legislative joint resolutions. (r) Serves as Secretary of State.

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SECRETARIES OF STATE

Secretaries of State and Election Reform in the States By Meredith B. Imwalle The U.S. Congress passed landmark legislation in 2002 that was intended to improve the administration of elections in this country. The nation’s chief state election officials are working now to implement those reforms, despite the fact that much-anticipated federal guidance is late and promised federal funds may never arrive. Introduction

Statewide Voter Registration Databases

The most striking thing about November 2, 2004 is what didn’t happen. There were no media reports of widespread voter disenfranchisement, and only scattered reports of voting equipment glitches and poll worker mistakes. Election Day was not without its challenges, such as long lines at polling places and large numbers of provisional ballots cast, but media reports on November 3 reflected a positive outcome: the elections ran smoothly overall. In fact, elections for local, state and federal offices this year operated much the way Congress intended when it passed the Help America Vote Act of 2002 (HAVA), election reform legislation drafted after the 2000 election to improve voting system technology and election administration procedures. The states met the law’s 2004 deadlines, and some states have completed reforms they could have postponed until 2006. But the states’ work is far from finished. The law gives states only until January 1, 2006 to implement statewide voter registration databases and to provide updated voting equipment that is accessible to the disabled. The secretaries of state, the chief state election officials in 39 states, are focused now on meeting the deadlines HAVA imposed and continuing to improve the elections process overall. Between now and the 2008 elections, voters can expect to see significant and positive changes in many key areas of election reform. It is likely that the states will concentrate on four areas of election reform in the coming months: statewide voter registration databases, voting equipment, voter education and poll worker training programs. This article will not speculate about what the end results might be. Abraham Lincoln once said, “With high hope for the future, no prediction is ventured.1” In keeping with that cautiously optimistic spirit, I will describe work in progress that is clearly headed in the right direction.

HAVA gives each state until January 1, 2006 to implement a statewide voter registration database that includes the name and registration information for every voter in the state, and assigns a unique identifier to each one.2 The states have indicated that the development of these databases will be a priority over the next few months. Since the passage of HAVA, Congress has appropriated $3 billion in election reform money to the states. According to a survey conducted by the National Association of Secretaries of State (NASS),3 the states will spend most of that money on the statewide voter registration databases. More than half of the survey’s respondents said their state will spend up to 40 percent of its HAVA funds developing, implementing and maintaining its database, and one in five states will spend as much as 70 percent. The databases promise to streamline election administration—every state and local election official will be able to immediately access the information from anywhere in the state—and reduce the need for provisional ballots, but the states have been precluded from moving ahead as quickly as many had hoped. Even though HAVA was enacted in 2002, the states did not receive federal funding for the required databases until June 2004. Guidance expected from the U.S. Election Assistance Commission (EAC), which was created by HAVA to help the states implement the law, has still not been received. And a requisite Social Security Administration system intended to enable the states to verify the validity of voter registrations was not completed until September 2004. Despite these obstacles, the states are making progress. Fifteen states actually used the databases in November 2004, and as many as 10 more states have systems in place and are simply fine-tuning them.4 Almost every state has at least started the acquisition process.

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SECRETARIES OF STATE

Voting Equipment Voters in the United States used six different types of voting systems on November 2, 2004. Before Election Day, experts predicted that more than 55 million voters would use optical scan systems; more than 50 million would use direct response electronic voting machines (DREs); 32 million would vote on punch cards, 22 million would vote on lever machines and the remainder would use paper ballots or some combination of systems.5 Updating voting equipment is another one of the states’ priorities. In fact, voters in most states can expect to see at least one piece of new equipment in their polling places in 2006. Under HAVA, states have until January 1, 2006 to implement a voting system that meets the following requirements6:

will be completed. In order to meet HAVA’s deadline for revamping their voting systems, the states will have to proceed now with selecting and installing new equipment.

Voter Education In 2004, the secretaries of state reached out to voters in unprecedented ways. This was due in large part to the fact that, for the first time, the states had federal dollars to spend on these efforts. Sixty-three percent of the states NASS surveyed will spend up to 10 percent of their HAVA funds on voter education. Seventy-five percent of the states used HAVA funds on extensive voter education efforts during 2004, including:

• Notifies a voter if he/she over-votes, or selects more than one candidate for the same race, and gives him or her the opportunity to correct the ballot;

• Mock elections;

• Produces a permanent paper record with a manual audit capacity;

• Easy-to-read instructional guides for voters.

• Provides levels of access, privacy and independence to disabled voters that are equal to those available to other voters; and • Provides alternative language accessibility in accordance with the requirements of the Voting Rights Act.7 If spending amounts are any indication, the states will be very focused on voting equipment in the near future. Close to 40 percent of the NASS survey participants reported that their state will spend 50 percent or more of its election reform money on voting equipment. Seventy-five percent of the respondents said their state will spend at least one-quarter of its HAVA money on equipment. Some of the states have already started replacing their old systems. More than 324 jurisdictions throughout the country have switched voting systems since HAVA passed. Georgia and Nevada established uniform voting systems statewide, and both states used them in the 2004 election. Maryland will implement a uniform system in 2006.8 Many of the states that have not yet introduced HAVA-compliant voting systems have been waiting for the federal government to release updated voting equipment guidelines. The EAC, in cooperation with the National Institute for Standards and Technology, is required by HAVA to issue the voluntary guidelines. The first discussion draft will be available in April 2005, and it is still unclear when the final draft

• Distribution of sample ballots; • Presentations to community organizations and schools; and The Arkansas secretary of state’s staff worked with the Martin Luther King Commission to conduct a mock election during a national youth conference. Iowa’s secretary of state sent voter guides to every household in the state. North Dakota’s secretary of state used HAVA money to fund $56,000 in grants to Native American tribal organizations in order to help educate voters in that minority community. Minnesota and Michigan offered polling place locators on their Web sites. The states hope to continue these efforts, but they may be forced to scale back due to lack of funding. Congress failed to appropriate $800 million in authorized HAVA funds for fiscal year 2005—money the states were counting on to help pay for future voter education campaigns.

Poll Worker Training States launched more comprehensive poll worker training programs this year than ever before. Poll worker training programs are typically conducted at the county level, but an overwhelming majority of chief state election officials report that they have taken a more active role since HAVA passed. Fortyfour percent of the states NASS surveyed will spend up to 10 percent of their HAVA money on poll worker training efforts including: • Producing training materials; • Establishing training standards; and The Council of State Governments

253


SECRETARIES OF STATE • Conducting specialized workshops. Connecticut’s secretary of state conducts many training sessions personally, and reviews and certifies any training sessions conducted by other staff members. Georgia provides printed training materials and videos to local jurisdictions. Indiana was one of several states that issued guidebooks this year with step-by-step instructions for poll workers. And before this year’s election, Oregon conducted public meetings with the disability community and produced a brochure for election officials entitled, “How to Assist Voters with Disabilities.” Efforts in these states and others have made a significant impact on the quality of poll worker training programs, and have helped lend some level of uniformity to poll worker training statewide. The states intend to continue and expand these programs, but may struggle to finance them if HAVA is not fully funded.

Conclusion These reforms are just part of the comprehensive plans the states developed for implementing HAVA’s federally mandated election reforms. The budgets the states included in their plans were largely based on the amount of money Congress promised when it passed the HAVA in 2002. Seventy-four percent of the states NASS surveyed used federally authorized amounts when calculating their budgets for fiscal year 2003. Sixty-three percent of the respondents based their FY 2004 budgets on authorized amounts and 65 percent used authorized amounts to develop their FY 2005 budgets. Only half of the survey participants will be able to fulfill all of the elements of their plans if HAVA is not fully funded. Unfortunately, soft expenditures like voter education initiatives and poll worker training programs will likely be the areas that suffer most. The states may be forced to rely on outside groups like NASS and other nonprofit, nonpartisan organizations to continue these efforts. In the absence of federal funds, financing for the work will have to come from philanthropic groups and other appropriate grant programs. The states will use the money they have on more tangible expenditures, specifically voting equipment and voter registration databases. While many states have already purchased new voting equipment and started the process of acquiring voter registration databases, they will still look to the EAC for guidance. The secretaries of state will continue to urge the EAC to develop and publish updated voluntary 254

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voting system guidelines in time for the states to meet the January 1, 2006 HAVA deadline for implementing the equipment. And the secretaries will look to the EAC to develop and publish recommended guidelines for statewide voter registration databases well in advance of HAVA’s January 1, 2006 implementation deadline. The secretaries of state achieved significant reforms in 2004. They will continue to improve the elections process, even if promised federal guidance is delayed and approved federal funds are not received. Between now and 2006, the nation’s chief state election officials will work toward their ultimate goal—a positive voting experience for every American who votes.

Notes 1 Abraham Lincoln, Second Inaugural Address, (Washington, D.C.: March 4, 1865). 2 United States Congress, Help America Vote Act of 2002: Title III, Subtitle A, Section 303 3 The National Association of Secretaries of State, How States are Spending Federal Election Reform Dollars. (The National Association of Secretaries of State, November 15, 2004). http://www.nass.org/Survey%20Summary%20 HAVA.pdf. 4 Electionline, “The 2004 Election,” (December 2004). http://www.electionline.org/site/docs/pdf/ERIP%20Brief 9%20Final.pdf. 5 Election Data Services, “New Study Shows 50 Million Voters will use Electronic Voting Systems, 32 Million Still with Punch Cards in 2004,” (February 12, 2004). http:// www.electiondataservices.com/EDSInc_VEstudy2004.pdf. 6 Help America Vote Act of 2002: Title III, Subtitle A, Section 303. 7 United States Congress, Voting Rights Act of 1965: Section 203. 8 Election Data Services.

About the Author Meredith B. Imwalle is the director of communications for the National Association of Secretaries of State. She served as a delegate-at-large to the second annual Congressional Conference on Civic Education and she is a member of the steering committee of the Council for Excellence in Government’s Campaign for the Civic Mission of Schools. Imwalle is a member of the Public Relations Society of America.


SECRETARIES OF STATE

Table 4.15 THE SECRETARIES OF STATE, 2005 State or other jurisdiction

Name and party

Method of selection

Length of regular term in years

Date of first service

Present term ends

Number of previous terms

Maximum consecutive terms allowed by constitution

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Nancy Worley (D) E 4 1/03 1/07 0 2 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ------------------------------------------------------------------------Jan Brewer (R) E 4 1/03 1/07 0 2 Charlie Daniels (D) E 4 1/03 1/07 0 2 Bruce McPherson (R) E (i) 4 3/05 (i) 1/07 0 2

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Donetta Davidson (R) Susan Bysiewicz (D) Harriet Smith Windsor (D) Glenda Hood (R) Cathy Cox (D)

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

----------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ------------------------------------------------------------------------Ben Ysursa (R) E 4 1/03 1/07 0 ... Jesse White (D) E 4 1/99 1/07 1 ... Todd Rokita (R) E 4 1/03 1/07 0 2 Chet Culver (D) E 4 1/99 1/07 1 ...

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Ron Thornburgh (R) Trey Grayson (R) W. Fox McKeithen (R) Matthew Dunlap (D) R. Karl Aumann (R)

E E E L A

4 4 4 2 ...

1/95 12/03 1/88 1/05 1/03

1/07 12/07 1/08 1/07 ...

2 0 4 0 0

... 2 ... ... ...

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

William Francis Galvin (D) Terri Lynn Land (R) Mary Kiffmeyer (R) Eric Clark (D) Robin Carnahan (D)

E E E E E

4 4 4 4 4

1/95 1/03 1/99 1/96 1/05

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/08 1/09

2 0 1 2 0

... 2 ... ... ...

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

Brad Johnson (R) John Gale (R) Dean Heller (R) William Gardner (D) Regena Thomas (D)

E E E L A

4 4 4 2 ...

1/05 12/00 (d) 1/95 12/76 1/02

1/09 1/07 1/07 12/06 1/06

0 (d) 2 14 0

(c) ... 2 (f) ... ...

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Rebecca Vigil-Giron (D) Randy Daniels (D) Elaine Marshall (D) Alvin Jaeger (R) J. Kenneth Blackwell (R)

E A E E E

4 ... 4 4 (h) 4

1/87 (g) 4/01 1/97 1/93 1/99

1/07 ... 1/09 1/07 (h) 1/07

2 0 2 2 1

2 ... ... ... 2

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

M. Susan Savage (D) Bill Bradbury (D) Pedro A. Cortes (D) Matthew Brown (D) Mark Hammond (R)

A E A E E

4 4 ... 4 4

1/03 1/99 (e) 5/03 1/03 1/03

1/07 1/09 ... 1/07 1/07

0 (e) 0 0 0

... 2 ... 2 ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Chris Nelson (R) E 4 1/03 1/07 0 2 Riley Darnell (D) L 4 1/93 1/09 3 ... Roger Williams (R) A ... 2/05 ... 0 ... ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ------------------------------------------------------------------------Deb Markowitz (D) E 2 1/99 1/07 3 ...

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Anita Rimler (D) Sam Reed (R) Betty Ireland (R) Douglas LaFollette (D) Joe Meyer (R)

American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

----------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ------------------------------------------------------------------------Marisara Pont Marchese A ... NA ... ... ... (a)

E E A A E

A E E E E

4 4 ... ... 4

... 4 4 4 4

7/99 (b) 1/99 1/01 2/03 1/99

1/02 1/01 1/05 1/99 1/99

1/07 1/07 ... ... 1/07

... 1/09 1/09 1/07 1/07

1 (b) 1 0 0 1

0 1 0 1 1

2 ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

See footnotes at end of table.

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SECRETARIES OF STATE

THE SECRETARIES OF STATE, 2005 — Continued Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey October 2004 and state Web sites, January 2005. Key: E—Elected by voters A—Appointed by governor. L—Elected by legislature. . . .—No provision for. (a) No secretary of state. (b) Secretary Davidson was appointed by Gov. Bill Owens in July 1999 upon the death of Secretary Vikki Buckley. She was elected to finish out the remaining two-year term in November 2000, and then was re-elected to a full four-year term in November 2002. (c) Eligible for eight out of 16 years.

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(d) Secretary Gale was appointed by Gov. Mike Johanns in December 2000 upon the resignation of Scott Moore. He was elected to a full four-year term in November 2002. (e) Secretary Bradbury was appointed Secretary of State in November 1999 and was elected to a four-year term in November 2000 and 2004. (f) Term limits were not effective until Secretary Heller’s second term in office. His second term counts as his first. (g) Secretary Vigil-Giron served from 1987–1991. She was elected again in 1998 and in 2002. (h) Because of a constitutional change approved by voters in 2000, the term for the secretary elected in 2004 will be only two years. It will revert to a four year term in 2007. (i) Appointed in March 2005 upon the resignation of Kevin Shelley.


SECRETARIES OF STATE

Table 4.16 SECRETARIES OF STATE: QUALIFICATIONS FOR OFFICE State or other jurisdiction

Minimum age

U.S. citizen (years) (a)

State resident (years) (b)

Qualified voter (years)

Method of selection to office

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

25 7 5 ★ E ....................................................................................... (c) ................................................................................................ 25 10 5 ... E 18 ★ ★ ★ E 18 ★ ★ ★ E

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

25 ★ 2 ... E 18 ★ ★ ★ E ... ... ★ ... A ....................................................................................... (f) ................................................................................................ 25 10 4 ★ E

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

....................................................................................... (c) ................................................................................................ 25 ★ 2 ★ E 25 ★ 3 ... E ... ... ★ ... E 18 ... ... ... E

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

... 30 25 ... ...

... ★ 5 ... ...

... ★ 5 ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

E E E (e) A

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

18 18 21 25 ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

5 ★ ★ 5 (d) ★

★ ★ ★ ★ 2

E E E E E

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

25 ... 25 18 18

★ ★ 2 ★ ★

2 ★ 2 ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

E E E (e) A

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

30 18 21 25 18

★ ★ ... ★ ★

5 ★ ... 5 ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

E A E E E

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

31 18 ... 18 18

★ ... ... ★ ★

10 ★ ... 30 days ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

A E A E E

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont .............................. Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming ............................. American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

... ... ... ... E ... ... ... ... (e) 18 ★ ... ... A ....................................................................................... (c) ................................................................................................ ... ★ ★ ★ E ... 18 ... 18 25

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ 1

... ★ ★ ★ ★

A E E E E

....................................................................................... (c) ................................................................................................ ....................................................................................... (c) ................................................................................................ ....................................................................................... (c) ................................................................................................ ... 5 5 ... A ....................................................................................... (c) ................................................................................................

Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey of secretaries of state, October 2004. Key: ★—Formal provision; number of years not specified. . . .—No formal provision. A—Appointed by governor. E—Elected by voters. (a) In some states you must be a U.S. citizen to be an elector, and must be an elector to run. (b) In some states you must be a state resident to be an elector, and must be an elector to run.

(c) No secretary of state. (d) State citizenship requirement. (e) Chosen by joint ballot of state senators and representatives. In Maine and New Hampshire, every two years. In Tennessee, every four years. (f) As of January 1, 2003, the office of Secretary of State shall be an appointed position (appointed by the governor). It will no longer be a cabinet position, but an agency head and the Department of State shall be an agency under the governor’s office.

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SECRETARIES OF STATE

Table 4.17 SECRETARIES OF STATE: ELECTION AND REGISTRATION DUTIES

State or other jurisdiction

Chief election officer

Receives initiative and/or referendum petition

Files certificate of nomination or election

Supplies election ballots or materials to local officials

Files candidates’ expense papers

Files other campaign reports

Conducts voter education programs

Registers charitable organizations

Registers corporations (a)

Processes and/or commissions notaries public

Registers securities

Registers trade names/marks

Registration

Determines ballot eligibility of political parties

Election

Alabama .............................. Alaska (b) ............................ Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ (c) ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ (d) ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ (e) ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Hawaii (b) ........................... Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

... ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ...

... ★ (h) ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ...

(d) ★ ... ★ ...

(d) ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

... ★ ★ ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ... ...

★ (f) ★ ★ ★ ...

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

... ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah (b) ............................... Vermont ..............................

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ .. ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... (i)

... ... ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

American Samoa (b) ......... Guam (b) ............................. Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands (b) ......

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ...

★ ... ... ...

★ ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ (g)

★ ... ★ ★

... ... ★ ...

... ... ★ ★

See footnotes at end of table.

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SECRETARIES OF STATE

SECRETARIES OF STATE: ELECTION AND REGISTRATION DUTIES — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey of secretaries of state, October 2004. Key: ★—Responsible for activity. . . .—Not responsible for activity. (a) Unless otherwise indicated, office registers domestic, foreign and nonprofit corporations. (b) No secretary of state. Duties indicated are performed by lieutenant governor. In Hawaii, election related responsibilities have been transferred to an independent Chief Election Officer.

(c) Files certificates of election for publication purposes only; does not file certificates of nomination. (d) Federal candidates only. (e) Incorporated organizations only. (f) Files certificates of congressional and judicial retention elections only; does not file certificates of nomination. (g) Both domestic and foreign profit; but only domestic non-profit. (h) Office issues document, but does not receive it. (i) Materials not ballots.

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SECRETARIES OF STATE

Table 4.18 SECRETARIES OF STATE: CUSTODIAL, PUBLICATION AND LEGISLATIVE DUTIES

State or other jurisdiction

Administers uniform commercial code provisions

Files other corporate documents

State manual or directory

Session laws

State constitution

Statutes

Administrative rules and regulations

Opens legislative sessions (a)

Enrolls or engrosses bills

Retains copies of bills

Registers lobbyists

Legislative

Files state agency rules and regulations

Publication

Archives state records and regulations

Custodial

Alabama .............................. Alaska (b) ............................ Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................ Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

... ... ★ ★ ★ ... ★(c) ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ... ... ... ★ ... ... ★

★ ... ... ★ ... ... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ... ... S ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ... ... ...

... ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ... ... ...

Hawaii (b) ........................... Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

... ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ... ...

... ... H ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ...

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

... ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ (d)

★ ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ... ... ...

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ... H ★ H

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

H ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

... ... ★ ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

H ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

... ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah (b) ............................... Vermont ..............................

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

H ... ... ... H

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... H

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

American Samoa (b) ......... Guam (b) ............................. Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands (b) ......

... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ★

... ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★

... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★

... ... ... ★

... ... ... ...

Sources: The Council of State Governments survey of secretaries of state, October 2004. Key: ★—Responsible for activity. . . .—Not responsible for activity. (a) In this column only: Both houses; H—House; S—Senate.

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(b) No secretary of state. Duties indicated are performed by lieutenant governor. (c) The secretary of state is keeper of public records, but the state archives is a department of the Connecticut State Library. (d) Code of Maryland regulations.


ATTORNEYS GENERAL

Attorneys General: Emerging Trends and Issues By Angelita Plemmer As the state’s chief state legal officer, the attorney general commonly serves as the most visible and influential state official in the fight against crime. In recent years, multistate efforts by attorneys general have increased their visibility, power, influence and success in enforcement efforts in a number of complex legal areas impacting all areas of public life. Antitrust State attorneys general have been characterized as “the guardians of the gates of effective antitrust enforcement.� During the past quarter century, state attorneys general have played an increasingly significant role in ensuring the operation of the free market. Even before the 1890 passage of the Sherman Act, the key federal antitrust law, the majority of states had some form of state law prohibiting pricefixing. State attorneys general are authorized to enforce both federal and state laws that address both vertical and horizontal price fixing, tying of a less popular item to a desired item, and anticompetitive mergers. This unique ability to pursue violations in both federal and state court has resulted in many multistate cases that are national in scope, in addition to local bid-rigging and price fixing cases. The goal of state attorneys general in antitrust enforcement now, as always, is competition, and accordingly, lower prices, to provide higher quality and a greater variety of innovative new products for citizens of their states. During the past decade, the trend in state antitrust enforcement has been toward multistate litigation filed by a number of the attorneys general on cases with national impact. Multistate litigation typically includes cost sharing arrangements among the attorneys general and may also include deputization of staff attorneys from one state to act as assistant attorneys general in other states for investigation and litigation purposes. Some examples of successful multistate coordination in antitrust cases include vertical price fixing cases in the agricultural chemical, shoe and music industries. Recently, attorneys general have concentrated on the pharmaceutical industry, challenging tying arrangements and attempted monopolization, as well as anticompetitive activities designed to delay entry into the market by generic competitors. Although federal law bars recovery for antitrust violations by indirect purchasers, nearly half the states have statutes that specifically permit indirect

purchasers to recover damages for state antitrust law violations. This ability of some attorneys general to pursue claims on behalf of indirect purchasers has led to a novel multistate litigation technique in which suits brought in various state courts are resolved by a single settlement. For example, 23 attorneys general entered into a settlement with vitamin manufacturers to resolve indirect purchaser claims resulting from a 10-year price fixing conspiracy. State attorneys general also use federal and state antitrust laws to challenge anticompetitive activity within a single state. For example, the attorney general of New York successfully challenged an arrangement between two hospitals through which they negotiated jointly with third-party payers and allocated services among themselves. The California attorney general reached a settlement with a ferry company accused of forcing customers to purchase tickets for other cruises in order to obtain tickets to its most popular destination, Alcatraz Island. As the enforcers of state and federal antitrust laws and as the chief legal officers of their respective states, attorneys general have a substantial interest in ensuring that antitrust laws are applied in a manner that is consistent with underlying congressional policy and judicial precedent. Accordingly, attorneys general communicate their views on antitrust and competition policy through amicus briefs, comments on proposed federal regulations, legislative advocacy and National Association of Attorneys General (NAAG) resolutions. The education of state and local government officials on the fundamentals of antitrust laws is an important function performed by many attorneys general. Many attorneys general review state contracts, professional licensing board regulations and proposed business practices for anticompetitive effects. In some states, the attorney general reviews the regulations of state boards and agencies to determine whether they unnecessarily limit competition. The regulations of professional licensing boards concerning advertising, solicitation of business and the loThe Council of State Governments

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ATTORNEYS GENERAL cation of offices are typical regulations reviewed by the attorneys general.

Bankruptcy Bankruptcy laws impact attorney general activities in numerous ways. Bankruptcy is a federal law and attorneys general may be responsible for collecting a vast array of types of debts owed to the states, ranging from traditional contracts with private parties, to student loans, to enforcing domestic support obligations owed to dependent spouses and children. Whenever one of those debtors files bankruptcy, the state must carefully evaluate how and whether it can continue to collect its debt so as not to violate the limitations imposed by the bankruptcy laws. Recent trends show that bankruptcy issues, in connection with the regulatory activities of attorneys general, are impacting a number of legal areas, rather than simply traditional debt collection activities. Whenever states seek to collect restitution for amounts owed to victims in consumer protection and antitrust cases, or to require cleanup of environmentally contaminated facilities, or to order a party to cease and desist from unlawful activities, they may find that the defendant will file bankruptcy in order to resist those enforcement efforts. The Bankruptcy Code allows many, but not all of the states’ enforcement activities to continue, despite the bankruptcy filing, and also limits the state’s ability to deny licenses, grants and permits to those who have filed bankruptcy. Thus, it is critical for states to thread their way through the web of special rights and responsibilities created by the code. Bankruptcies have a national scope, so states have frequently chosen to work together, often with the assistance of NAAG, to present a common front in the bankruptcy case to resolve common issues. In doing so, they attempt to ensure that the rights of not only the states as such, but also the rights of their citizens, are protected to the greatest degree allowed by the Code. In the recent MCI/Worldcom bankruptcy case, for instance, about 15 states jointly audited the debtor’s tax filings and have argued that the company engaged in an elaborate tax avoidance scheme that may have diverted hundreds of millions of dollars from state tax coffers. In the First Alliance case, six lead states worked with the Federal Trade Commission and private class counsel to obtain remedies for some 20,000 consumers in about 20 states who had been victimized by a predatory mortgage lending scheme, eventually obtaining tens of millions of dollars in restitution from the debtor, even after it filed bankruptcy.

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Civil Rights Attorneys general have civil rights enforcement responsibilities either as counsel to state civil rights agencies or pursuant to their own independent authority. In addition, many states have passed legislation that has enhanced their enforcement ability. States’ civil rights enforcement efforts include working with the public, law enforcement entities, state, federal and local government agencies to ensure nondiscrimination. The areas of enforcement are varied, but more recent trends include actions in fair employment, housing discrimination, disability rights, mortgage lending, and bias-related crimes. Many of the civil rights issues and trends are also addressed through education, training programs, litigation and outreach. Towards this end, a number of attorneys general have established sections of their offices committed to such efforts known as, for example, the Civil Rights Enforcement Section, Disability Rights Project or the Office of Civil Rights.

Consumer Protection Attorneys general continue to lead the nation in protecting their states’ consumers. Attorneys general protect citizens from online scams, such as phishing, fraudulent auctions and spam; price gouging and charities fraud in the wake of disasters; telephone and mail fraud and home repair scams, which target elderly consumers disproportionately; subprime lending abuses, such as payday lending and illegal debtcounseling operations; and the improper marketing of prescription drugs. The consumer protection programs administered by attorneys general are multifaceted. Attorneys general have primary responsibility in their states for the enforcement of state consumer protection laws. Every state has a consumer protection statute prohibiting deceptive acts and practices. These broad general statutes are supplemented in all jurisdictions by laws that target specific industries or practices found to be particularly problematic. Among the areas addressed in these statutes are auto repair, telemarketing and do-not-call, identity theft, spam, price gouging and enhanced penalties for victimizing the elderly. Attorneys general have varied tools and authority to address abuses and illegalities in the marketplace. These include civil and criminal litigation, mediation, public education, creating and commenting on state and federal legislative proposals, and cooperative enforcement ventures with state, local and federal enforcement agencies. A continued trend among attorneys general is that they continue to supplement their state-specific en-


ATTORNEYS GENERAL forcement efforts with multistate investigatory and litigation efforts. This sharing and leveraging of sometimes-scant resources and collective action on issues that transcend state borders have produced successful results in efforts to stop consumer frauds involving misleading telecommunications advertising, the deceptive off-label marketing of prescription drugs and illegal overcharging of consumers for their leased vehicles. Perennial areas of investigation and enforcement include: retail sales, automobile rental, home repair, telemarketing and telecommunications. Areas of more recent concern include Internet-based marketing schemes; privacy, including identity theft, spam, the failure of both brick-and-mortar and online businesses to comply with required or self-imposed privacy policies; and the misleading advertising of prescription drugs and dietary supplements.

Criminal Law As the state’s chief law enforcement official, the attorney general commonly serves as the most visible and influential state official in the fight against crime. While the constitutional and statutory authority of attorneys general in the area of criminal law varies by jurisdiction, the attorney general, typically is a critical component in the successful investigation and prosecution of criminal activity, as well as upholding criminal convictions that are challenged through direct appeal and collateral proceedings in state and federal courts. In recent years, attorneys general have emerged as leaders in the legal and policy discussions taking place in the law enforcement community. The ability of the attorney general to take an active role in criminal investigations and prosecutions depends on statutory or constitutional authority. While some attorneys general are responsible for the prosecution of all violations of state law, as is the case in Alaska, Delaware and Rhode Island, other attorneys general have almost no criminal authority in their jurisdiction. In Connecticut, for example, all criminal prosecutions are conducted under the Office of the Chief State’s Attorney rather than through the Office of the Attorney General. In many jurisdictions, the attorney general’s office has its own criminal investigative unit with authority to conduct investigations statewide. For example, the Office of the Attorney General of Kentucky recently announced the creation of the Kentucky Bureau of Investigation, the first investigative unit of its kind in the commonwealth. In a number of jurisdictions, the statewide investigative bureau is directly under the attorney general’s supervision and authority. In Wis-

consin, for instance, the attorney general is the head of the state Department of Justice, which houses the Division of Criminal Investigation, the statewide investigation entity. Similarly, in New Jersey and Rhode Island, among other jurisdictions, the attorney general exercises supervisory control over the state police, which conduct statewide criminal investigations. In still other jurisdictions, the criminal investigative authority of the attorney general is limited to particular issues. For example, in Florida, the only criminal investigative section within the Office of the Attorney General is the Medicaid Fraud Control Unit. In addition to direct investigative involvement, attorneys general, in most jurisdictions, provide important training services to peace officers and local prosecutors, ranging from manuals and newsletters, to seminars and training academies. For instance, through the California attorney general’s Advanced Training Center, California law enforcement officers from across the state receive specialized training from recognized experts in the field. Although attorneys general are continuing their law enforcement efforts in traditional areas such as organized crime, white collar crime and Medicaid fraud, emerging trends in criminal justice matters are demanding more attention, including issues related to gang violence, victims’ rights, and prescription drug abuse and diversion. Still other growing areas of concern have led to an organized effort on the part of the attorneys general, including coordination through working groups and task forces within NAAG, related to interstate movement of registered sex offenders, manufacturing of methamphetamine using common pre-cursor chemicals found in overthe-counter products, and issues of legal preparedness in the context of homeland security and a potential terrorist attack.

Cybercrime As the states’ top law enforcers, attorneys general are facing an increasing number of crimes occurring using computers and the Internet. Today’s technology-driven world provides a new arena for criminals and other unscrupulous actors as perpetrators are becoming more adept at using computers and the Internet to commit fraud, identity theft, stalking and online exploitation of children through online luring and exposure to child pornography. In response, many attorneys general have established task forces, either entirely within their offices or in collaboration with other state law enforcement entities, to investigate and prosecute online child exploitation. In Texas, the cyber crime unit has arrested more than 200 predaThe Council of State Governments

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ATTORNEYS GENERAL tors since its inception. In addition to an increasing number of cases involving identity theft using the computer, as well as cyberstalking, a traditional sex crime with a high tech component, attorneys general are addressing a sharp rise in crimes involving online commerce, particularly in the sale of illegal merchandise. For example, Massachusetts recently sought and obtained a court order barring Internet merchants from selling illegal weapons, such as stun guns and switchblades, in the state. As Americans become more proficient in using the Internet for their shopping needs, attorneys general have seen a sharp increase in the number of cases of fraud perpetuated by sellers on Internet auction sites, especially by the seller failing to deliver the merchandise after receiving payment or by the seller using shills to bid up the price. As an example, Oklahoma recently charged an online auction seller with failing to deliver $30,000 worth of trailers that he sold on eBay. Attorneys general are also involved in addressing the proliferation of computer intrusion-related crimes, such as hacking, denial of service attacks, computer viruses and worms, all of which demonstrate that the critical elements of our infrastructure remain vulnerable to cyber attacks. In May 2004, 50 prosecutors from attorney general offices attended an intensive training on investigating and prosecuting criminals who perpetrate these types of crimes. A recent issue addressed by the attorneys general is the growth of peer-to-peer (P2P) networks that allow the free sharing of digital files. The P2P software has often been hijacked by criminals who use it for illegal purposes, such as trading in child pornography and piracy of movies and music. In response, more than 40 attorneys general sent a letter to the networks warning them that they may face enforcement actions if they do not take steps to stem illegal activity. The attorneys general also asked the networks to stop adding encryption features that prevent law enforcement agencies from policing the networks to determine whether they are aiding illegal activity.

End of Life In 2002, Oklahoma Attorney General and NAAG President Drew Edmondson launched an initiative to explore how attorneys general could help improve end-of-life health care for the citizens of their states. Attorneys general in each state are charged with protecting constituents in matters affecting the public interest, including consumer protection of those who are dying. A report resulting from the initiative, “Im264

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proving End of Life Care: The Role of Attorneys General,” identified three areas of concern in which attorneys general can play a major role: ■

Ensuring competent end-of-life care;

Removing barriers to effective pain management; and

Acknowledgement and respect for the wishes of those who are dying.

Since the report was issued, a number of attorneys general have sought to improve end-of-life health care in their states. NAAG began an End of Life Health Care Project in 2004 to enhance the ability of attorneys general to assist constituents as they plan for how they want to live at the end of their lives. How much and what type of curative treatment is desired and under what circumstances? Where would they like to live while they are dying? Is avoiding or minimizing pain more important than the number of days one can stay alive or should every effort be made to keep them alive as long as possible? Who should make health care decisions for them if they become unable to do so? These are very personal questions and answers vary among individuals and according to circumstances. Fourteen attorneys general, through their work on the NAAG End of Life Health Care Working Group, provide leadership on how attorneys general and their staffs can help citizens address these issues. In addition, attorneys general from most states have designated staff to be involved in end-of-life health care activities. At the state level, a number of attorneys general have created their own state task forces or are otherwise working in conjunction with physicians and other health care providers, consumers, legislators, grassroots coalitions and advocacy groups to improve end of life care. Some have focused on the places in which people die—hospices, nursing homes, hospitals and homes, to ensure quality care and to prevent other considerations from creating barriers to that care. Ensuring access to pain management to alleviate suffering at the end of life is an important and challenging counterbalance to the need for law enforcement to prevent drug diversion. Legislation and legal issues in the area of decision-making are also important to end of life care. A number of attorneys general have simplified advance directive requirements and procedures through leadership or participation on state end-of-life commissions, legislative proposals brochures and Web sites for citizens of their states, and advisory opinions.


ATTORNEYS GENERAL

Environment The state attorney general is the primary enforcer of laws protecting the environment and natural resources. As a general rule, attorneys general have responsibility for enforcing federal environmental statutes when enforcement of those laws devolves to the states, as well as responsibility for state-specific environmental protection laws. In some cases, local prosecutors share criminal enforcement authority with the attorney general. Similarly, attorneys general sometimes work with the U.S. Department of Justice and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency on joint environmental enforcement cases, allowing both groups to leverage their limited resources. As environmental enforcement practice has matured, many attorneys general have integrated air, water and waste disposal issues into largely standardized initiatives. New practice areas have tended to focus on three emerging sets of issues. 1. Regional or geographically linked questions including water issues in the West, downwind air pollution questions and coastal issues such as cruise ship pollution, invasive species and coastal zone management; 2. Cleanup statutes and broad principles of tort law, including natural resource damage claims that are the conclusion of long-standing cleanup efforts; and 3. Litigation of the limits of federal environmental authority in a variety of contexts. Issues touching on the relationship between state and federal powers include the scope of federal review over state permitting programs, the definition of “waters of the United States,” and the discretionary— or ministerial—responsibility of the federal government to promulgate regulations on specific subjects, to mention only a few.

During the 108th Congress, attorneys general from around the country came to Capitol Hill to testify before both House and Senate committees on issues affecting the states. State attorneys general testified often on behalf of consumers regarding fair credit, on-line pharmaceuticals, identity theft, banking issues and predatory lending. In addition, during the 108th Congress, attorneys general testified on environmental bills, securities and many other issues. Many of the following issues on which attorneys general have taken policy positions, testified or monitored actively, will be in consideration again in the 109th Congress beginning in January of 2005: Antitrust ■

Medicare Prescription Drug, Improvement, and Modernization Act of 2003

Drug Price Competition

Prescription Drug Importation

Patient Access to Health Care

Antitrust Exemption for Insurance Industry

Antitrust Enforcement

Retail Gas Prices

Bankruptcy ■

Bankruptcy Overhaul

Consumer Protection ■

Identity Theft

“Do Not Call”

SPAM

Legislation

Household Goods Movers

NAAG’s role in the federal legislative process is clearly defined by the association. NAAG takes positions on federal legislation in several ways. NAAG policies are created either by members voting on resolutions at full-member conferences or by signing onto letters as a group. Generally, resolutions and sign-on letters are limited to those matters that diminish or office of attorneys general or preempt state law. Frequently, attorneys general across the country are asked by Congress, media, business organizations and constituents for their views on bills pending in Congress that affect the powers and duties of attorneys general. Often, such legislation seeks to preempt state law in the areas of consumer protection, environment, antitrust, bankruptcy, securities, criminal law and many other areas within the jurisdiction of attorneys general.

Fair Credit Reporting Act

Cell Phone Bill of Rights

Online Pharmaceuticals

OCC Preemption of State Authority over OCC Chartered Banks

Privacy

Rent to Own

Jurisdictional Certainty Over Digital Commerce Act

Debt Counseling, Debt Consolidation and Debt Settlement

Predatory Lending

Anti-Pyramid Scheme Legislation The Council of State Governments

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ATTORNEYS GENERAL ■

Drug Price Disclosure

State Solicitors and Appellate Chiefs

Internet File Sharing

Protecting Older Americans from Fraud

Flu Vaccine Price Gouging

One notable development in the management of attorney general offices is the increasing use of state solicitors to oversee the offices’ respective appellate practices. On the criminal law side, most attorney general offices engage exclusively in (or almost exclusively) appellate work. The head of the criminal section is usually a de facto state solicitor for that portion of the office’s work. On the civil side, however, most attorney general offices traditionally had no single hand guiding their respective appellate practices. The various civil sections (e.g., environmental, consumer protection, civil rights and civil defense) would independently oversee their sections’ appellate briefs and arguments. Over the past decade, this has started to change. More than half the states now have a state solicitor (or a person with a different title who serves that role), whose responsibility is to oversee the office’s civil appellate work to ensure high quality and consistency of positions. The role of the state solicitor and his or her team of deputies and assistants varies from office to office. Most state solicitor units do not take over the bulk of their respective offices’ civil appeals. Rather, they provide editorial assistance and general advice to various other attorneys scattered throughout the office. Among the exceptions are the state solicitor units in New York and Oregon, and the Civil Appeals unit in Illinois, which handle most of their respective offices’ civil appeals. State Solicitors improve the quality of an office’s briefs and oral arguments and ensure consistent positions are taken by the attorney general throughout the office.

Criminal ■

Crime Victims Bill of Rights

Gangs

DNA and the Innocence Protection Act

Hate Crimes

Homeland Security/USA Patriot Act/ Immigration

Firearms

Sex Offender Registry

Youth

Witness Protection

Voice-Over-Internet-Protocol

Cybercrime ■

E-Checks

Database Protection

Identification Database

Spyware

End-of-life Health Care ■

Pain Management

Advance Directives

Palliative Care Improvements

Tobacco Environmental ■

Exemptions from Environmental Laws for Department of Defense

State role in Hydropower Licensing

Tobacco ■

Attorneys’ Fees

PACT Act/Delivery Sales of Cigarettes

FDA Regulation of Tobacco

Violence Against Women ■

Children in Domestic Violence Settings

Sexual Assault in Prisons

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In 1994, states sued the four largest tobacco companies1 in the United States for health care costs imposed on the states by consumers’ consumption of cigarettes. In 1998, the attorneys general of 46 states and six U.S. territories signed the Tobacco Master Settlement Agreement (MSA) with these companies to settle state suits to recover costs associated with treating smoking-related illnesses.2 According to the MSA, tobacco companies agree to make payments to the states in perpetuity with a present value of $206 billion. In return, the states agreed to release the Participating Manufacturers from specified claims that the states (but not individuals) had and might have in the future for costs arising out of tobacco-related illnesses. Since 1998, almost 50 tobacco manufacturing companies (known as Subsequent Participating


ATTORNEYS GENERAL Manufacturers under the agreement) have joined the MSA. Most recently, in 2004, the nation’s largest non-participating tobacco manufacturer, General Tobacco, joined the MSA. Attorneys general hope that other tobacco companies that have not joined the agreement will join to make the coverage of the MSA close to universal. The MSA, enforced by attorneys general, contains a number of public health provisions designed to reduce youth smoking. It prohibits tobacco companies from targeting youth in advertising, promotions or marketing. It also bans industry actions aimed at initiating, maintaining or increasing youth smoking. Other provisions of the agreement are: bans on all outdoor advertising, including billboards, signs and placards in arenas, stadiums, shopping malls and video game arcades; limits on advertising outside retail establishments to a size of 14 square feet; and bans on transit advertising of tobacco products. Tobacco companies are also prohibited from attempting to suppress research that may limit information about the health hazards from the use of their products, into smoking and health, or into the marketing or development of new products; and they are prohibited from making any material misrepresentations regarding the health consequence of smoking. As the chief legal officers of their respective jurisdictions, attorneys general have played a critical role in ensuring MSA compliance by tobacco companies. A number of states have been successful in recent actions to enforce a number of the MSA’s key public health provisions. Courts have ruled in favor of attorneys general who have sought penalties for enforcement violations surrounding advertising programs that violate the Agreement’s youth targeting provisions; initiated investigations of flavored cigarettes; pursued retailers that allow the illegal sale of tobacco products to minors; and questioned claims by tobacco manufacturers that they are producing less harmful products. As a result of the work of the attorneys general and the public health community, U.S. consumption of tobacco products is down nearly 20 percent and youth smoking has been reduced by more than 25 percent. Total payments to date made under MSA equal $35.3 billion, some of which state legislatures are designating for public health and tobacco control programs.

One of the most recent successes for attorneys general was the passage of changes to the Allocable Share Provision of the Model Escrow Statute in 39 states. This legislation is also under consideration in other states. The changes were enacted to ensure that settling states would receive the benefits of the MSA and that companies that refused to enter into the MSA would not be able to profit unfairly by their non-participation. In addition, states are seeing the benefits of the passage of complementary NPM enforcement legislation, which enhanced the ability of the MSA settling states to ensure a non-participating manufacturer’s compliance with escrow regulations in current state statutes.

Conclusion Cooperation and coordination by attorneys general have become an invaluable means of supplementing state-specific litigation, investigation and enforcement activities in a variety of legal areas. States continue to face increasing caseloads and diminishing resources, stemming from decreased state funding. Cross-border cooperation acknowledges that crime knows no borders, particularly as crimes become more high-tech. These cooperative ventures extend to local and federal enforcement agencies as well, and have resulted in countless successes in uncovering abuses and illegalities in the marketplace, and ensuring the health and welfare of citizens across the country.

Notes 1 Philip Morris, RJR, Brown and Williamson and Lorillard. 2 Florida, Minnesota, Texas and Mississippi settled their tobacco cases separately from the MSA states in 1997.

About the Author This article was edited and compiled by Angelita Plemmer, director of communications for the National Association of Attorneys General. A former print journalist, Plemmer joined the association staff in 2001. She formerly worked as the public information office for the city of Roanoke and as the assistant city manager for public information for the city of Alexandria, Va. She holds a master’s degree in journalism from Columbia University and a bachelor of arts degree from the University of Virginia.

The Council of State Governments

267


ATTORNEYS GENERAL

Table 4.19 THE ATTORNEYS GENERAL, 2005 State or other jurisdiction

Name and party

Method of selection

Length of regular term in years

Date of first service

Present term ends

Number of previous terms

Maximum consecutive terms allowed

3/04 (i) 2/05 1/03 1/03 1/99

1/07 ... 1/07 1/07 1/07

0 0 0 0 1

2 ... 2 (a) 2 2

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Troy King (R) Scott Nordstrand (Acting) Terry Goddard (D) Mike Beebe (D) Bill Lockyer (D)

E A E E E

4 ... 4 4 4

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

John W. Suthers (R) Richard Blumenthal (D) M. Jane Brady (R) Charlie Crist (R) Thurbert E. Baker (D)

E E E E E

4 4 4 4 4

1/05 (n) 1/91 1/95 1/03 6/97 (j)

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/07 1/07

0 3 2 0 1 (j)

2 ★ ★ 2 ★

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Mark J. Bennett (R) Lawrence Wasden (R) Lisa Madigan (D) Steve Carter (R) Tom Miller (D)

A E E E E

4 (l) 4 4 4 4

12/02 1/03 1/03 1/01 1/79

12/06 1/07 1/07 1/09 1/07

0 0 0 1 4

... ★ ★ ... ★

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Phill Kline (R) Greg Stumbo (D) Charles C. Foti Jr. (D) G. Steven Rowe (D) J. Joseph Curran Jr. (D)

E E E (b) E

4 4 4 2 4

1/03 1/04 1/04 1/01 1/87

1/07 1/08 1/08 1/05 1/07

0 0 0 0 4

★ 2 ★ 4 ★

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Tom Reilly (D) Mike Cox (R) Mike Hatch (D) Jim Hood (D) Jeremiah W. Nixon (D)

E E E E E

4 4 4 4 4

1/99 1/03 1/99 1/04 1/93

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/08 1/09

1 0 1 ... 3

2 2 ★ ★ ★

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

Mike McGrath (D) Jon Bruning (R) Brian Sandoval (R) Kelly Ayotte Peter C. Harvey (D)

E E E A A

4 4 4 ... ...

1/01 1/03 1/03 7/04 3/03

1/09 1/07 1/07 ... ...

1 0 0 0 0

2 (c) ★ 2 ... ...

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Patricia A. Madrid (D) Eliot Sptizer (D) Roy Cooper (D) Wayne Stenehjem (R) Jim Petro (R)

E E E E E

4 4 4 4 (d) 4

1/99 1/99 1/01 12/00 1/03

1/07 1/07 1/05 12/06 1/07

1 1 1 1 0

2 (a) ★ ★ ★ (d) 2

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

W. A. Drew Edmondson (D) Hardy Myers (D) Tom Corbett (R) Patrick Lynch (D) Henry McMaster (R)

E E E E E

4 4 4 4 4

1/95 1/97 1/05 1/03 1/03

1/07 1/09 1/09 1/07 1/07

2 2 0 0 0

★ ★ 2 (a) 2 (a) ★

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Larry Long (R) Paul G. Summers (D) Greg Abbott (R) Mark Shurtleff (R) William H. Sorrell (D)

E (f) E E E

4 8 4 4 2

1/03 1/99 1/03 1/01 5/97 (e)

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/09 1/07

0 0 0 1 3 (e)

2 (a) ... ★ ★ ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Judith W. Jagdmann (R) Rob McKenna (R) Darrell Vivian McGraw Jr. (D) Peg Lautenschlager (D) Pat Crank (D)

E E E E A (h)

4 4 4 4 ...

2/05 (o) 1/05 1/93 1/03 1/03

1/06 1/09 1/09 1/07 1/07

0 0 3 0 0

(g) ★ ★ ★ ...

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico .........................

Robert Spanoletti (D) Fiti Sunia Douglas Moylan Pamela Brown Roberto J. Sanchez-Ramos

A A E A A

... 4 4 4 4

6/03 N.A. 1/03 2003 N.A.

... N.A. 1/07 N.A. ...

0 N.A. 0 N.A. 0

... ... ... ... ...

U.S. Virgin Islands .............

Alva Swan

A

4

N.A.

...

0

...

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey of attorneys general, November 2004 and state Web sites. ★—No provision specifying number of terms allowed. . . .—No formal provision, position is appointed or elected by governmental entity (not chosen by the electorate). A—Appointed by the governor. E—Elected by the voters. L—Elected by the legislature. (a) After two consecutive terms , must wait four years and/or one full term before being eligible again. (b) Chosen biennially by joint ballot of state senators and representatives. (c) Eligible for eight out of 16 years.

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The Book of the States 2005

(d) The term of the office of the elected official is four years, except that in 2004 the attorney general was elected for a term of two years. (e) Appointed to fill unexpired term in May 1997. Elected in 1998 to full term. (f) Appointed by judges of state Supreme Court. (g) May hold office for an unlimited number of terms. (h) Must be confirmed by the Senate. (i) Appointed to fill unexpired term in March 2004. (j) Appointed to fill unexpired term in June 1997. Elected in 1998 to a full term. (l) Term runs concurrently with the Governor. (m) Appointed to fill unexpired term in February 2004. (n) Appointed to fill unexpired term in January 2005. (o) Appointed to fill unexpired term in February 2005.


ATTORNEYS GENERAL

Table 4.20 ATTORNEYS GENERAL: QUALIFICATIONS FOR OFFICE State or other jurisdiction

Minimum age

U.S. citizen (years) (a)

State resident (years) (b)

Qualified voter (years)

Licensed attorney (years)

Membership in the state bar (years)

Method of selection to office

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

25 ... 25 ... 18

7 ★ 10 ... ★

5 ... 5 ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

... ... 5 ... (c)

... ... 5 ... (c)

E A E E E

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

25 18 ... 30 25

★ ★ ... ★ 10

2 ★ ... 7 4

... ★ ... ★ ★

★ 10 ... ★ ★

(d) 10 ... 5 7

E E E E E

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

... 30 25 ... 18

1 ★ ★ 2 ★

1 2 3 2 ★

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ 5 ...

(e) ★ ... ... ...

A E E E E

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

... 30 25 ... ...

... ... 5 ... ★(h)

... 2 (f) 5 (f) ... ★

... ... ★ ... ★

... 8 5 ... ★

... 2 5 ... 10

E E E (g) E

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

18 18 21 26 ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

5 ★ 30 days 5 1

★ ... ★ ★ ...

... ★ ... 5 ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

E E E E E

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

25 ... 25 18 18

★ ... ★ ... ...

2 ... 2 (f) ... ★

... ... ★ ★ ...

5 ... ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

E E E A A

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

30 30 21 25 18

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

5 5 ★ 5 ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ (i) ★ ★ ...

... ... (i) ★ ...

E E E E E

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

31 18 30 18 ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

10 ★ 7 30 days (f) 30 days

10 ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

E E E E E

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

18 ... ... 25 18

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ 5 (f) ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

(i) ... (i) ★ ...

(i) ... (i) ★ ...

E (j) E E E

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

30 18 25 ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

1 (k) ★ 5 ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ... ... 4

5 (k) ★ ... ... 4

E E E E A (l)

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico .........................

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ★

★ (c) ... 3 ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ (i) ... 5 ★

★ (i) ... ... ★

A A A A A

U.S. Virgin Islands .............

...

...

A

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey of attorneys general, October 2004 and state constitutions and statutes, February 2005. Key: ★ — Formal provision; number of years not specified. . . . — No formal provision. A—Appointed by governor. E—Elected by voters. (a) In some states you must be a U.S. citizen to be an elector, and must be an elector to run. (b) In some states you must be a state resident to be an elector, and must be an elector to run. (c) No statute specifically requires this, but the State Bar Act can be interpreted as making this a qualification.

(d) Licensed attorneys are not required to belong to the bar association. (e) No period specified, all licensed attorneys are members of the state bar. (f) State citizenship requirement. (g) Chosen biennially by joint ballot of state senators and representatives. (h) Crosse v. Board of Supervisors of Elections 243 Md. 555, 2221A.2d431 (1966)–opinion rendered indicated that U.S. citizenship was, by necessity, a requirement for office. (i) Implied. (j) Appointed by judges of state Supreme Court. (k) Same as qualifications of a judge of a court of record. (l) Must be confirmed by the Senate.

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269


ATTORNEYS GENERAL

Table 4.21 ATTORNEYS GENERAL: PROSECUTORIAL AND ADVISORY DUTIES

May supersede local prosecutor

To legislators

To local prosecutors

On the constitutionality of bills or ordinances

Prior to passage

Before signing

Reviews legislation:

To state executive officials

Issues advisory opinions:

A,D (a) B,D D A,B,C,D,E

A (a) B ... A,B,C,D,E

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

B ... (j) ... B,D,G

D,F (b) ... (j) D A,B,D,E,F,G

B ... (j) ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (c) ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

A,B,C,D,E B,D,F D,F F D,F

A,B,C,D,E ... D,G ... D,F

A,B,C,D,E D D D D,F

A,B,C,D,E ... G ... D,E,F

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★(k) ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ... (p)

★ ★ ... ... (p)

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

A,B,C,D,F D,F,G A,D,G A B,F

A,D B,D,G A,D,G A D

D D D A D

A,F B G A ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

(g) ... ★ ★ ★

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

A A B,F A,D,F F,G

A A B,D,G D,F ...

A,D D A,B,D,G A,D,F B,F

A (b) B D,F G

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★(h) ★ ★(h) ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ...

(g) ... ... ... (g)

(g) ... (g) ... (g)

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

D,F A D,F,G A A

A,B,D A D A A,B,D,G

A,B,D A ... A A,D

A A ... A A,B,D,G

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★(i) ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... (t) ... (q) ★

... ... ... (q) ★

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

B,D,E,F B,F ... A,D,E,F,G F

D,E,F B,D,F D A,D,G D

A,B,D,E,F D D A,B,D,E,F,G D

D,E,F,G B ... A,G F

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★(h) ★ ★ (i)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ (f) ...

★ ★ ... (g) ...

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

A,B,C,E,F B,D,F D,F,G A A,D,E,F (b)

A,B,C,E,F B,D ... A A,B,C,D,E,F

A,B,C,E B,D ... ... A,D

E ... G ... A,E

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ (l)

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ... ★ ... ★

(r) (r) ... ★ ... ... ★ ... ★(m) ★(g)

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

A,B,D,E,F (b) D,F,G (b) F A,B,D,E,F,G A

D,G (b) D,G (b) ... E,G A

A,B,D,E D D D,E A

D,F ... ... E G

★ ★ ★(d) ★ ★

★ ★ ★(d) ★(l) ★

★ ★ ★(d) ★ ★

... ★ ★(d) ★ ★

★ ... ... ... (n) (n) ★(g) ★(g) ★ ★

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

B,F B,D ... B,C,F B,D,F

B,D,F D ... B,C,D B,D

B,D,F D ... D B,D

B ... ... B G

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★(k) ★(k)

★ (g) ... (e) ★

★ (g) ... (e) ★

Dist. of Columbia ............. American Samoa .............. Guam ................................. No. Mariana Islands ........ Puerto Rico .......................

F A (j) A A (j) A

D (j) A (j) (j)

D (j) A (j) (j)

F (j) A (j) (j)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

(s) (j) ★ ... ...

★ (e) ★ ★ ...

★ (g) (g) ... ★

★ (g) B ... ★

U.S. Virgin Islands ...........

A (j)

(j)

(j)

(j)

...

...

Authority in local prosecutions: State or other jurisdiction

Authority to initiate local prosection

May intervene in local prosecutions

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

A (a) A,B,C,D,F ... A,B,C,D,E

A,D (a) B,D ... A,B,C,D,E

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

B,F ... A (j) F B,D,E,F,G

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

See footnotes at end of table.

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May assist local prosecutor

★ ★ (e) (e) ★(o) ★(o) ... ... ... ...


ATTORNEYS GENERAL

ATTORNEYS GENERAL: PROSECUTORIAL AND ADVISORY DUTIES — Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey of attorneys general, October 2004. Key: A—On own initiative. B—On request of governor. C—On request of legislature. D—On request of local prosecutor. E—When in state’s interest. F—Under certain statutes for specific crimes. G—On authorization of court or other body. ★—Has authority in area. . . .—Does not have authority in area. (a) Local prosecutors serve at pleasure of attorney general. (b) Certain statutes provide for concurrent jurisdiction with local prosecutors. (c) To legislative leadership. (d) Only upon request by a statutorily authorized requestor. (e) Informally reviews bills or does so upon request. (f) Opinion may be issued to officers of either branch of General Assembly or to chairman or minority spokesman of committees or commissions thereof.

(g) Only when requested by governor or legislature. (h) To legislature as a whole not individual legislators. (i) To either house of legislature, not individual legislators. (j) The attorney general functions as the local prosecutor. (k) Bills, not ordinances. (l) Only when requested by legislature. (m) Has concurrent jurisdiction with states’ attorneys. (n) Official opinions, when requested, regarding proper construction or constitutionality of proposed or enacted legislation. (o) Also at the request of agency or legislature. (p) No requirements for review. (q) When legislation impacts the office or upon request. (r) If required by legislature; may assist in drafting. (s) The office of attorney general prosecutes local crimes to an extent. The office’s Legal Counsel Division may issue legal advice to the office’s prosecutorial arm. Otherwise, the office does not usually advise the OUSA, the district’s other local prosecutor. (t) If requested by a legislator.

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Table 4.22 ATTORNEYS GENERAL: CONSUMER PROTECTION ACTIVITIES, SUBPOENA POWERS AND ANTITRUST DUTIES May commence civil proceedings

May commence criminal proceedings

Represents the state before regulatory agencies (a)

Administers consumer protection programs

Handles consumer complaints

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California ..........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (l) ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ (n) ... ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (f)

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Montana (h) ...................... Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina ................. North Dakota ................... Ohio ...................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

State or other jurisdiction

Subpoena powers (b) ●

★ (n) ●

★ ★ ●

★ ★ ●

Antitrust duties A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C,D A,B A,B,C A,B,C,D A,B,D A,B,D A,B,C,D ...

★ ★

A,B,C,D A,B,D A,B,C A,B B,C

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

A,B A,B,C,D A,B,D A,B,C B,C,D

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ●

★ ★

A,B,C,D A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C,D A,B,C

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ (m) ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

A,B A,B,C,D A,B,C,D A,B,C A,B,C,D

★ ★ ★(e) ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

A,B,C (p) A,B,C,D A,B,C,D A,B,D A,B,C,D

★ ★ ★ ★ ★(a)

★ ★(e) ★ ★ ★(c)

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★(m)

★ ★ ★

A,B,C,D A,B,C A,B,C,D B,C A,B,C,D

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

★ ★ ★ ★(d) ★

★ (e)(f) ★(j) ★ ★

★ (e) ★ ★(d) ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ... ★ ★(g) ★

★ ★

Virginia ............................. Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming ...........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

(e) ... ... ★ ...

★ (k) ★ ★ ★

★(g) ★ ★ ★ ★

★(g) ★ ★ ★ ★

Dist. of Columbia ............. American Samoa .............. Guam ................................. No. Mariana Islands ........ Puerto Rico .......................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (o) ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ●

★ ★

A,B,C,D ... A,B,C,D A,B A,B,C,D

U.S. Virgin Islands ...........

A

See footnotes at end of table.

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● ●

● ●

★ ●

★ ★ ● ●

A,B,C B,C,D A,B,D A (i),B,C,D (i) A,B,C A,B,C,D A,B,D A,B,D A,B,C (p) A,B


ATTORNEYS GENERAL

ATTORNEYS GENERAL: CONSUMER PROTECTION ACTIVITIES, SUBPOENA POWERS AND ANTITRUST DUTIES – Continued Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey of attorneys general, October 2004. Key: A—Has parens patriae authority to commence suits on behalf of consumers in state antitrust damage actions in state courts. B—May initiate damage actions on behalf of state in state courts. C—May commence criminal proceedings. D—May represent cities, counties and other governmental entities in recovering civil damages under federal or state law. ★—Has authority in area. . . . — Does not have authority in area. (a) May represent state on behalf of: the “people of the state; an agency of the state; or the state before a federal regulatory agency. (b) In this column only: ★ broad powers and ● limited powers. (c) When permitted to intervene. (d) Attorney general has exclusive authority.

(e) To a limited extent. (f) May commence criminal proceedings with local district attorney. (g) Attorney general handles legal matters only with no administrative handling of complaints. (h) Exercise consumer protection authority only in cooperation with the state department of administration. (i) Opinion only, since there are no controlling precedents. (j) Under specific statutes for specific crimes. (k) The Public Counsel Unit appears and represents the public before the Utilities & Transportation Commission. (l) In certain cases only. (m) On a limited basis because the state has a separate consumer affairs department. (n) Antitrust only. (o) In antitrust not criminal proceedings. (p) May represent other governmental entities in recovering civil damages under federal or state law.

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ATTORNEYS GENERAL

Table 4.23 ATTORNEYS GENERAL: DUTIES TO ADMINISTRATIVE AGENCIES AND OTHER RESPONSIBILITIES

State or other jurisdiction

Serves as counsel for state

Appears for state in criminal appeals

Issues official advice

Interprets statutes or regulations

On behalf of agency

Against agency

Prepares or reviews legal documents

Represents the public before the agency

Involved in rule-making

Reviews rules for legality

Duties to administrative agencies

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

★ (a) ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

(b) ... ... ★ ...

(b) ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

★ (a) (b) ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ (i) ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

(e) ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

★ ★ (a) ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

★ ★ (h) ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ... (b)

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

(b)(c)(d) ★ (c)(d) ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ (a) ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ (f) ★

★ ★ ★ (f) ★

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

★ (b) ★ (b) ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (b) ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (b) (b) ... ...

★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ ...

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

A,B,C A,B A,B A,B,C A,B,C

★ ★ ... ★ ★ (d)

★ ★ ★ ★ (a)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ (b)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

★ ★ (a) ★ (g) ★ (a) ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... (e) ... (b) ★

... (e) ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

A,B,C A,B A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ (b) ★

★ ★ ★ (b) ★

★ ★ ... (b) ...

★ ★ ... (b) ★

★ ★ ... (b) ★

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico .........................

A,B A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C A,B,C

★ (j) ★ (a) ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ (d) ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... (b) ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

U.S. Virgin Islands .............

A,B

...

Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey of attorneys general, October 2004. Key: A—Defend state law when challenged on federal constitutional grounds. B—Conduct litigation on behalf of state in federal and other states’ courts. C—Prosecute actions against another state in U.S. Supreme Court. ★—Has authority in area. . . .—Does not have authority in area. (a) Attorney general has exclusive jurisdiction. (b) In certain cases only.

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Conducts litigation:

(c) When assisting local prosecutor in the appeal. (d) Can appear on own discretion. (e) Consumer Advocate Division represents the public in utility rate making hearings and rule making proceedings. (f) Limited. (g) Primarily federal habeas corpus appeals only. (h) Upon DA recusal. (i) Rarely. (j) However, OUSA handles felony cases and most major misdemeanors.


TREASURERS

State Treasurers: Guardians of the Public’s Purse By The National Association of State Treasurers State treasurers are the chief financial officers of the states who assume the duties of assuring the absolute safety of all taxpayer dollars as well as guaranteeing the prudent use of public resources that fund vital government programs. In several states, treasurers also improve the financial security of our citizens by providing college savings opportunities, financial education and returning unclaimed property. From management of state investments in a time of profound budgetary grief to taking an active and central role in defining what is greater corporate governance, state treasurers are vital players in the healthy management of not only state budgets, but federal policy on a multitude of issues that impact citizens in each and every state of the union. State treasurers also play a unique role in policy setting at both the state and federal levels. On issues ranging from corporate governance to accounting standards, state treasurers are at the forefront of policy discussions and initiatives that attempt to safeguard investments made by and on behalf of the residents of their states. Through this fiscal oversight and policy setting, state treasurers work daily to protect and benefit their individual states and the nation as a whole.

Selection and Term of Service State treasurers are elected by the people in 37 states, elected by the legislature in four states and appointed by the governor in nine states. Forty state treasurers serve four-year terms in office, while the state treasurers of Maine, New Hampshire, Tennessee and Vermont serve two-year terms. The remaining state treasurers serve at the discretion and pleasure of the state official making the appointment.

Responsibilities of State Treasurers All state treasurers are responsible for cash management, a fundamental duty of the states’ chief financial officers. All but three state treasurers are responsible for banking services and in 37 states, state treasurers are responsible for some aspect of debt management—issuance, service or both. Thirty-two state treasurers are administrators of unclaimed property programs and 29 invest retirement or trust funds for their respective state. Several examples—though certainly not an exhaustive listing—are given below and touch on the wide array of responsibilities held by state treasurers.

Managing State Budgets During the tight budget restrictions facing states over the past three years, even the squandering of a dime can raise constituent concerns. Therefore, it is especially important for treasurers in every state to make due with what they have. Managing shortfalls in state budgets, while largely viewed by the public as an issue for their state’s governor and state legislature, also relies heavily on the guidance of the state’s treasurer. Today’s treasurers must learn to stretch every dollar and adopt an “out of the box” approach to financing. While the task of investing available state funds may seem fairly straightforward to the public, the process is quite complex and requires specialized knowledge and skill. Treasurers must invest using the safest, most efficient methods available while earning the highest possible return. State treasurers’ performance and record of investment income critically affects the bottom line of the states’ fiscal fitness, which in turn can have a measurable impact on the well being of the states’ budgetary status in any given year. State treasurers, in particular, have fiduciary responsibility not only for pension plans and general state funds, but also for other investment vehicles, such as state college savings plans. The state treasurers, who collectively have fiduciary responsibility for more than one trillion dollars in public funds, contend that greater corporate responsibility is vital, since the business practices of U.S. corporations have a profound effect on public monies ranging from pension funds to state tax revenue investments.

Corporate Governance Reform The management and oversight of state investments are key functions of the state treasurers. Based on their unique investment role, the state treasurers also are among the most powerful entities speaking out and taking action to promote the development and implementation of corporate standards and pracThe Council of State Governments

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TREASURERS tices designed to restore and maintain investor confidence in the capital markets and protect shareholder rights. This will ultimately preserve, protect and grow the public fund assets under the management and custody of state treasurers across the nation. Since 2001, the state treasurers have undertaken a broad review of investment management and policy issues surrounding corporate governance in the U.S. equity markets. Through the National Association of State Treasurers (NAST) Committee on Corporate Governance, the state treasurers have developed innovative policies to enhance and improve corporate governance. In addition, many treasurers have taken an active role in improving corporate governance and financial reporting practices, calling upon corporations they do business with to verify that their accounting procedures are sound and that the money the state invests on behalf of its residents is safe. An example of one improvement is the development of the “Investor Protection Principles” for investments made with public funds. The principles set out the following obligations, among others: ■

Investment banks shall sever the link between compensation for analysts and investment banking;

Investment banks shall prohibit investment banking input into analyst compensation;

Money management firms shall disclose client relationships, including management of corporate 401(k) plans, where the money management firm could invest state or pension fund monies in the securities of a client;

Money management firms shall, in making investment decisions, consider the quality and integrity of a company’s accounting and financial data, as well as whether the company’s outside auditors also provide consulting or other services to the company; and

Money management firms shall, in deciding whether to invest state or pension fund monies in a company, consider the corporate governance policies and practices of the company.

The principles have been adopted by many state and national organizations as a prime way to hold businesses accountable to the shareholders and other investors who have a stake in their companies. In 2003, NAST adopted a set of major policy objectives designed to enhance general corporate governance structures. The policies established minimum standards corporations should follow to enhance corporate performance, including standards relating to corporate board structure and performance, access 276

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to the proxy process which allows shareholders to meaningfully engage in improving corporate performance, and improved director qualification requirements to increase board member independence and diversity, and new director compensations measures. Recently, NAST approved a policy resolution designed to make mutual funds disclose more information to shareholders. The resolution calls upon institutional investors, including all state and local public fund investors, to adopt into their investment practices and procedures the Mutual Fund Protection Principles. The policy resolution calls for reforms to mutual fund business practices including higher standards of disclosure directed at fund holdings, trading costs and soft dollar practices. The principles require enhanced disclosure of portfolio manager compensation, fund ownership and holding period requirements. Mutual fund board reform measures include requirements that approval of fund management fees only be conducted by independent directors; require that at least three-quarters of the mutual fund board and the chairman shall be independent; and assurances that the independent directors meet at least annually with the chief compliance officer of the fund as well as the independent auditor without management present. Treasurers and other public investors are also encouraged to give significant weight to mutual fund managers who embrace the principles and to encourage other defined benefit, deferred contribution and other savings plans to adopt them into their investment management practices.

College Savings Plans One of the greatest financial worries of many American families is, “How will I be able to afford a college education for my children?” All 50 statesºand the District of Columbia have created innovative college savings programs designed to meet the savings needs of their citizens. In 44 states and the District of Columbia, the state treasurer plays a vital role in the administration of the program, including oversight of all program operations, serving as the board chair or board member, and investment manager or committee member. The mission of the state plans is to increase access to higher education by offering families a simple, safe, affordable and dedicated way to save for college tuition. Section 529 plans come in two forms, prepaid tuition programs and savings plans. The prepaid tuition program offers families a method to prepay tuition based on current college tuition rates and


TREASURERS provides a guarantee to keep pace with tuition inflation. The savings plans offer dedicated qualified state college savings accounts, which provide families a variable rate of return in a tax advantaged college savings account. To date, more than 7 million children across the country have been enrolled in state college tuition or savings plan. These programs seek to make saving for college easier for the average family. These programs represent positive, productive and affordable options that can ensure the education of our most precious resources: the children of America. State sponsored savings plans promote: ■

Planning for education expenses;

Saving for education expenses instead of relying on debt;

Reliance on family resources instead of total reliance on government aid programs; and

State-level planning designed to meet the differing needs in each state instead of a “one size fits all” national approach.

Parents and other individuals have saved more than $64 billion to help their children and loved ones pay for future college costs. More importantly, in excess of 750,000 students have used more than $5.6 billion from these plans to fund their college education. Participants in both types of programs receive a federal tax exemption on the investment earnings of the accounts, when the funds are used to pay for qualified higher education expenses, which include tuition, room and board, books and fees, and any other expenses that students are required to pay to attend any accredited college or university in the United States. In 2004, state treasurers led a review of Section 529 plan disclosure documents in order to develop a set of disclosure principles that would allow consumers to make objective comparisons of fees and expenses for qualified tuition programs. By the end of 2004, all 50 states and the District of Columbia were implementing these disclosure principles in Section 529 college savings plans. The disclosure principles include tables and charts that provide a clear, concise and consistent description of fees and expenses. Additionally, the principles specify information that should be prominently stated for each program, such as the risk involved in investing in the plan, the need to consider state tax treatment and other benefits, and the availability of other state 529 programs. State treasurers are committed to the goal of providing opportunities for families to save to send their children to college and will continue to strive to make

Section 529 plans the most effective way for families to meet their college savings goals. NAST will monitor the implementation of the disclosure principles and will make revisions to the principles as necessary to improve the information available to participants and the public.

Unclaimed Property State treasurers are responsible for the administration of unclaimed property programs in 32 states and the District of Columbia. Unclaimed property (sometimes referred to as abandoned property) refers to accounts in financial institutions and companies that have had no activity generated or contact with the owner for one year or a longer period. Common forms of unclaimed property include savings or checking accounts, stocks, uncashed dividends or payroll checks, refunds, traveler’s checks, trust distributions, unredeemed money orders or gift certificates, insurance payments and life insurance policies, annuities, certificates of deposit, customer overpayments, utility security deposits, mineral royalty payments and contents of safe deposit boxes. Acting in the best interest of consumers, each state has enacted an unclaimed property statute that protects funds from reverting back to the company if it has lost contact with the owner. These laws instruct companies to turn forgotten funds over to a state official who will then make a diligent effort to find owners or their heirs. Most states hold lost funds until owners are found, returning them at no cost or for a nominal handling fee upon filing a claim form and verification of your identity. Since it is impossible to store and maintain all of the contents that are turned over from safe deposit boxes, most states hold periodic auctions and hold the funds obtained from the sale of the items for the owner. Some states also sell stocks and bonds and return the proceeds to the owner in the same manner. In order to return this money to owners, state unclaimed property programs publish names of owners in newspapers, set up displays at state fairs, malls, and other public events, work with other public officials such as legislators and local librarians, and make searchable databases available via the Internet including www.missingmoney.com. Each year through these activities hundreds of millions of lost dollars are returned to owners. State treasurers remain active in advocating improvements in unclaimed property statutes and regulations that further protect and return Americans’ forgotten assets. Recent developments in this arena have included lowering dormancy periods for funds The Council of State Governments

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TREASURERS to be reported from demutualized insurance companies and eliminating dormancy fees and expiration dates for gift certificates and prepaid gift cards. Treasurers are also trending toward stricter enforcement of unclaimed property laws by employing more auditors and levying interest and penalties for overdue funds that are discovered. Financial Literacy Initiatives State treasurers are viewed as trusted and credible sources of sound financial advice and have long recognized the need for responsible fiscal decisionmaking for the management of both public funds and personal finances. Over the past few decades, state treasurers have taken an active role in promoting financial literacy to the residents of their state. State treasurers operate financial education programs for the benefit of the citizens of the states, drawing upon their substantial expertise in the financial management of both personal and public funds to provide opportunities to educate the citizens of the states on savings, from birth to retirement. Thirty-five state treasurers presently offer some type of program ranging from “Bank at School” programs designed to teach students basic monetary concepts to women’s conferences that help adults gain control of their personal finances. Under the leadership of the state treasurer’s office, Delaware has been a pioneer in improving “financial literacy” since the late 1990s. The Delaware Money School was established to bring community

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based financial education to participants in a stress free setting. More than 400 Money School classes have reached close to 5,200 participants. Taught by volunteer analysts, financial planners, economists and other financial professionals, this program continues to be conducted with assistance from corporate sponsorships. Money School topics range from homeown-ership, debt management and investments to estate planning. Several states have adopted Delaware’s program molding it to fit their individual needs, with great success.

Conclusion The roles and responsibilities of state treasurers are countless and critically important to the fiscal well being of their respective states. Sound and profitable investments made by state treasurers make it possible for budgets to be balanced, for taxpayer-supported programs to be maintained and grown, and for a positive and equitable level of investment growth for public funds to be achieved.

About the Author The National Association of State Treasurers, an organization of state financial leaders, encourages the highest ethical standards, promotes education and the exchange of ideas, builds professional relationships, develops standards of excellence and influences public policy for the benefit of the citizens of the states. NAST is composed of all state treasurers, or state financial officials with comparable responsibilities from the United States, its commonwealths, territories and the District of Columbia.


TREASURERS

Table 4.24 THE TREASURERS, 2005 Length of regular term in years

Date of first service

Present term ends

Number of previous terms

Maximum consecutive terms allowed by constitution

4 4 4 4 4

1/03 2/05 1/03 1/03 1/99

1/07 N.A. 1/07 1/07 1/07

0 1 0 0 1

2 ... 2 (b) 2 2

4 1/99 4 1/99 4 1/99 4 1/88 Pleasure of the Board 11/97

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/07 N.A.

1 1 1 2 0

2 « « ... ...

12/02 1/99 1/95 2/99 1/83

N.A. 1/07 1/07 1/07 1/07

0 1 2 1 4

... 2 ★ (e) ★

4 4 4 2 4

1/03 1/00 1/00 1/05 2/02

1/07 12/07 1/08 1/07 1/07

0 1 1 0 0

... 2 ★ ... ...

E A A E E

4 Governor’s discretion ... 4 4

1/03 1/03 2/04 1/04 1/05

1/07 ... ... 1/08 1/09

0 0 0 0 0

★ ... ... ★ (g)

Janet Kelly Ron Ross Brian Krolicki (R) Michael Ablowich John McCormac

A E (j) E L A

4 1/05 4 12/03 4 1/99 2 12/02 Governor’s discretion 1/02

N.A. 1/07 1/07 12/07 N.A.

0 0 1 1 0

2 2 (b) 2 ... ...

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Robert Vigil (D) Aida Brewer Richard Moore (D) Kelly Schmidt (R) Jennette Bradley (R)

E A E E E (k)

4 Governor’s discretion 4 4 4

1/03 2/02 1/01 1/05 1/05

1/07 N.A. 1/09 1/09 1/06

0 0 1 0 0

2 (b) ... ★ ★ 2

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Robert Butkin (D) Randall Edwards (D) Robert Casey Jr. (D) Paul Tavares (D) Grady Patterson Jr. (D)

E E E E E

4 4 4 4 4

1/95 1/01 1/05 1/99 1/66

1/07 1/09 1/09 1/07 1/07

2 1 0 1 7

2 (b) (e) 2 (h) 2 (b)

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas (i) ............................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Vernon L. Larson (R) Dale Sims Carole Keeton Strayhorn (R) Edward Alter (R) Jeb Spaulding (D)

E L E E E

4 2 4 4 2

1/03 10/03 1/99 1/81 1/03

1/07 1/07 1/07 1/09 1/07

0 1 1 6 1

2 (b) ... 2 (b) ★ ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Jody Wagner Michael Murphy (D) John Perdue (D) Jack Voight (R) Cynthia Lummis (R)

A E E E E

Governor’s discretion 4 4 4 4

1/02 1/97 1/97 1/95 1/99

N.A. 1/09 1/09 1/07 1/07

0 2 2 2 1

... ★ ★ ★ ★

American Samoa ................ District of Columbia .......... Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico .........................

Francis Leasiolagi N. Anthony Calhoun Yasela Pereira Antoinette S. Calvo Juan Flores Galarza

A A CS A N.A.

4 Pleasure of CFO ... 4 4

N.A. 1/01 10/96 N.A. N.A.

N.A. N.A. ... N.A. N.A.

N.A. N.A. ... N.A. N.A.

... ... ... ... ...

U.S. Virgin Islands .............

Bernice A. Turnbull

A

4

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

...

State or other jurisdiction

Name and party

Alabama .............................. Alaska (a) ............................ Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Kay Ivey (R) Tom Boutin David Petersen (R) Gus Wingfield (D) Philip Angelides (D)

E A E E E

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida (c) ........................... Georgia ................................

Mike Coffman (R) Denise Nappier (D) Jack Markell (D) Tom Gallagher (R) W. Daniel Ebersole

E E E E A

Hawaii (d) ........................... Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Georgina Kawamura Ron Crane (R) Judy Baar Topinka (R) Tim Berry (R) Michael Fitzgerald (D)

A E E E E

4 4 4 4 4

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Lynn Jenkins (R) Jonathan Miller (D) John Kennedy (D) David Lemoine (D) Nancy Kopp (D)

E E E L L (l)

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota (f) ...................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Timothy Cahill (D) Jay Rising Peggy Ingison Tate Reeves (R) Sarah Steelman (R)

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

Method of selection

Source: National Association of State Treasurers, January 2005. Key: ★— No provision specifying number of terms allowed. . . . — No formal provision, position is appointed or elected by governmental entity (not chosen by the electorate). N.A. — Not available. A — Appointed by the governor. (In the District of Columbia, the Treasurer is appointed by the Chief Financial Officer. In Georgia, position is appointed by the State Depository Board.) E — Elected by the voters. L — Elected by the legislature. CS — Civil Service. (a) The Deputy Commissioner of Department of Revenue performs this function. (b) After 2 consecutive terms, must wait four years and/or one full term before being eligible again.

(c) Effective January 2003, the official title of the office of state treasurer is Chief Financial Officer. (d) The Director of Finance performs this function. (e) Eligible for eight out of any period of twelve years. (f) The Commissioner of Finance performs this function. (g) Absolute two-term limitation, but not necessarily consecutive. (h) Treasurer must wait four years before being eligible for the office of auditor general. (i) The Comptroller of Public Accounts performs this function. (j) Governor Johanns appointed Ron Ross in December 2003 to fill a vacancy in the Treasurer’s office. (k) Governor Taft appointed Jennette Bradley in December 2004 to fill a vacancy in the Treasurer’s office. (l) Elected in February 2002 and re-elected to a full four-year term in February 2003.

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TREASURERS

Table 4.25 TREASURERS: QUALIFICATIONS FOR OFFICE State

Minimum age

U.S. citizen (years)

State resident (years)

Qualified voter (years)

Method of selection to office

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

25 ... 25 21 18

7 ... 10 ★ ★

5 ... 5 ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

E A E E E

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

25 18 18 30 ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

2 ★ ★ 7 ...

... ★ ★ ★ ...

E E E E A

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

... 25 25 18 18

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ 2 3 ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

A E E E E

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

... 30 25 ... 18

... ★ 5 ★ ...

... 2 5 ★ ...

... ... ★ ... ...

E E E L L

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

... ... 21 25 ...

... ... ★ ★ ★

5 ... ★ 5 1

... ... ★ ★ ...

E A E E E

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

... 19 25 ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

... ★ 2 ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ...

A E E L A

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

30 ... 21 25 18

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

5 ★ ★ 5 ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

E A E E E

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

31 18 ... 18 ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

10 ★ ... 30 days ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

E E E E E

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

... ... 18 25 18

... ... ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ 5 2

... ... ... ★ ★

E L E E E

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

... 18 18 18 25

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ 5 ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

A E E E E

Source: National Association of State Treasurers, January 2005. Key: ★—Formal provision; number of years not specified. . . .—No formal provision. A—Appointed by the governor. E—Elected by the voters. L—Elected by the legislature.

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TREASURERS

State

Cash management

Investment of general funds

Investment of retirement and/or trust funds

Oversight of retirement funds

Oversight / management of debt issuance

Unclaimed property

Link deposit program

College Savings / Prepaid Tuition Programs

Table 4.26 TREASURERS: DUTIES OF OFFICE

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ N.A. ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ N.A. ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ... ...

... ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ...

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas (d) .............................. Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★

... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★

Source: National Association of State Treasurers, January 2005. Note: For additional information on functions of the treasurers’ offices, see Tables in Chapter 7 entitled Allowable Investments, Cash Management Programs and Services, and Demand Deposits. Key: ★—Responsible for activity. . . .—Not responsible for activity. N.A.—Not applicable. State does not issue debt.

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AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS

Trends in State Government Accounting, Auditing and Treasury By W. Daniel Ebersole State financial management leaders are working to offer increased services and transparency even as they contend with the need to accomplish more with limited resources. Government accountability, innovation in technology and strategic partnership initiatives will usher states into an exciting era of positive change. Opportunities Accounting and Financial Reporting For several decades, state and local governments have looked to the Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) for accounting and financial reporting standards. Without adequate funding, however, the independent standard-setting services provided by GASB cannot be sustained. In 2004, the National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers (NASACT) worked successfully with the National Association of State Treasurers and the Government Finance Officers Association to implement a bond assessment fee to supplement GASB’s budget. The assessment, which is being collected by The Bond Market Association, was expected to shore up any cracks in GASB’s funding, allowing for the seamless continuation of the board’s vital services to state and local governments. Although the system is currently in place, there is still much work to do to achieve the level of collections necessary for the funding of GASB. In addition, the concept of a “filing fee,” which would be imposed on all governmental entities that prepare financial statements according to generally accepted accounting principles as promulgated by GASB, is being explored. The issuance of timely financial statements and disclosures continues to be a topic that state governments address on a regular basis. Our research shows that 27 states issued their comprehensive annual financial reports in fewer days after year-end in fiscal year 2003 than in fiscal year 2002. Interim disclosure of financial-related information is also becoming a reality in some states. NASACT has worked with interested parties to discuss the mechanics of providing interim information and to develop a template for information that might be useful. Several states served as pilots in 2004 to implement the recommended template and have begun providing in282

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terim disclosures on their Web sites. The usefulness of the interim disclosures will be examined in the coming year as participating states begin to receive feedback. Addressing current issues faced by state government finance officials is not enough—we must also work together to identify issues that will affect our profession in the future. In partnership with the Association of Government Accountants, NASACT will participate in a research project to ascertain the extent, if any, to which certain provisions of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act might be applicable and appropriate for state and local governments in the United States to implement. The development of a survey and the gathering of data for this project will occur over the next six to nine months. Additionally, state government officials will remain alert to the notion of a worldwide convergence of accounting principles, as conversations about the need for international accounting standards continue. Corporate Governance and Accountability While certainly not a new topic, corporate governance continues to be a priority for state finance officials. Corporate scandals that have plagued our nation have resulted in a number of reforms that attempt to restore investor confidence and re-establish the integrity of our nation’s corporations and financial reporting practices. Better shareholder access through reforms being implemented as a result of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act is key among the issues being considered by financial officials as stewards of public monies. A strong corporate governance structure can be linked to a healthy and stable economy. As investors in U.S. and foreign corporations, states are shareholders with a keen interest in making sure directors are doing their jobs to oversee the financial wellbeing of the companies in which they serve. Accountability has always been of utmost importance to fi-


AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS nancial officials in managing taxpayer dollars, and carrying out fiduciary duties through better shareholder participation only improves this notion. More democratic forms of corporate governance are necessary to assure that there is a proper structure in place for appropriate management of corporate affairs. State finance officials will continue to promote successful reforms so that the companies in which they invest seek greater transparency and better accountability. Institutional investors often face public criticism for investing in companies that are operating in countries designated by the state department as sponsoring terrorism. This issue, however, is not a simple one. Public pension funds have the ability to identify financial risks associated with companies having operations that may expose states to countries listed by the federal government as sponsors of terrorism. Public pension funds do not, however, have the ability to determine which companies compromise national security through the business they conduct, and public pension funds are not in a position to determine foreign policy. The issue is further clouded by the fact that institutional investors may or may not have information about which companies have businesses or subsidiaries operating in terrorism-sponsoring states. When registering on U.S. exchanges, a company is required to provide only information that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission considers to be “material.� State finance officials are diligent about seeking information about the firms in which they invest and as part of their fiduciary duty will factor in any financial risk associated with business in these countries. However, the responsibility for national security lies with the federal government. Technology and Innovation The delivery of benefits in the states is an important task performed by finance officials, and thus the quest for efficient, cost-effective delivery systems remains an area of special interest. The electronic benefit transfer card has been a very effective means of delivering food stamp benefits; however, the number of programs that can be run on the card is limited. Although stored value cards have been around for some time, more and more states are now considering the use of stored value cards to deliver other types of benefit payments. There are numerous advantages to using stored value cards as a method of payment. Originally offered as an alternative for paper checks and direct deposit, the use of stored value cards in the states

has expanded to include payments for payroll, child support and unemployment. Some benefits of using stored value cards include card acceptance wherever the credit card is accepted, cash withdrawal at ATMs worldwide, zero consumer fraud liability under credit card rules, and 24-hour customer service support. Payment flexibility is an important benefit for the recipient, and increased efficiency and administrative cost reduction add value for states. The authentication of electronic credentials remains a technological challenge for both the public and private sector. Through the Electronic Authentication Partnership, a public-private partnership working to develop interoperability among public and private electronic authentication systems, state finance officials are working to find a solution to the problem. The partnership has recently developed its first board, which will set into motion initiatives to provide the public and private sectors with a straightforward means of relying on digital credentials issued by several different e-authentication systems. State finance officials will also be keeping a close watch on the development of an initiative designed to facilitate common reporting—the emergence of eXtensible Business Reporting Language (XBRL). XBRL provides a common XML-based platform for critical business reporting processes and has the potential to improve the reliability and ease of communicating financial data among users. In the wake of slightly improving budget situations for some states, enterprise resource planning (ERP) has once again become a viable topic of discussion. A survey of the states conducted in 2004 indicates that of 26 responding states, over two-thirds have completed implementation of new ERP systems, have started ERP implementation, or are in the planning stages for ERP. The business process re-engineering that typically precedes an ERP implementation is an important step toward greater efficiency. States report that other advantages ERP can bring include easier online processing, better system interfacing, easier data retrieval, improved reporting, faster posting of expenditures to federally funded programs and faster drawdown of federal funds. Benchmarking, Best Practices and Partnering for Success As state governments continue work to streamline operations and reach new levels of efficiency and innovation, benchmarking, the study of best practices and partnering to accomplish goals are logical starting points. In order to improve, state governments must first The Council of State Governments

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AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS have some measure by which to examine performance. With that aim in mind, the National Association of State Comptrollers asked its Benchmarking Committee to investigate the feasibility of a national benchmarking project to collect performance metrics for the accounting and payroll functions in state government. The objective of the project was to build a database of state performance metrics and practices that participants can use to assess their own performance. In 2004, a pilot project by six states was undertaken to gather performance metrics on four comptroller functions. The results of the project were presented at the 2004 NASACT annual conference, and the group will be looking for ways to expand the project in 2005 to involve more states and cover other areas of financial management. Cost recovery projects continue to be a vehicle for states looking to recover more fully their costs of administering federal programs. States are finding that recovery auditing offers a win-win scenario. Agencies do not need a budget to get started, and contingency fees are based upon a percentage of actual recovered dollars. Additionally, accounts payable firms contracted to perform recovery services use software developed specifically for the purpose of identifying overpayments—software that also provides benchmarking capabilities. Based upon recent audit recovery successes, more states will likely look to this method as a low-cost, high-yield investment of time and resources. The receipt of credit card payments by both state and local governments is a topic that has also been scrutinized lately by state finance leaders. NASACT is currently gathering data about the receipt of payments via credit cards by states with a view toward creating a “government” rate for interchange fees that reflects the high volume and low risk that state and local governments present to the market. Once the survey data for this initiative is analyzed, those working on this project intend to negotiate with the major credit card vendors for lower interchange fees for government.

Challenges One of the biggest challenges state governments are likely to face in coming years is the shortage of qualified, trained professionals to fill vacant positions in government financial management. With more and more government finance professionals retiring or migrating to the private sector and fewer students pursuing finance-oriented degrees and careers, labor shortages are on the horizon for many states. 284

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NASACT recently expressed its support of a project called the Cooperative for Contemporary Curricula in Financial Management, or C3FM. This initiative will address the shortage of qualified individuals going into government finance by exploring the feasibility of a financial management education partnership in the Western region. We look forward to seeing results from the project, which is being spearheaded by the Hatfield School of Government at Portland State University, and to examining ways that the program might be expanded to the national level to address the same problem in other regions of the country. As it does on a regular basis, GASB has promulgated some especially challenging new standards; of particular note are those standards on accounting and reporting of other postemployment benefits (OPEB), of which health care is the largest. The new standards will require for each OPEB plan a statement of plan net assets, a statement of changes in plan net assets, a schedule of funding progress and a schedule of employer contributions. Because many OPEB plans in the past have been funded on a pay-as-yougo basis and have not established trust funds to collect assets to meet long-term liabilities, states expect to be reporting large OPEB liabilities when the standard becomes effective in fiscal year 2007. State finance officials remain keenly aware of everevolving security, privacy and information technology concerns. With the emergence of new technologies including wireless applications, state finance professionals find it increasingly important to become educated on advances that affect the security of equipment, data and entire systems. Not investing in technology is not an option for states. E-commerce and e-government have become the norm, not the cutting-edge exception, and governments have made great progress toward utilizing technology to offer expanded and improved services to citizens. This is an exciting time for state finance officials who are now more familiar with the benefits—and the costs—involved with implementing new technologies.

Conclusions and Perspectives State government financial management wears a different face today than in the past. State leaders are operating in an environment that grows increasingly complex with each new technological advance or political shift. And as citizens come to expect a certain level of service from government, state leaders will continue to be challenged to think strategically to address growing demands for efficient ser-


AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS vice, accountability and convenience. Now more than ever, state finance leaders must work together across the divides between states, functions and agencies to develop integrated and innovative solutions to old problems. State budgets, although improving, will likely continue to slow the pace of investment in new technologies to improve state operations. Our task will be to think creatively to address the inevitable new challenges.

About the Author W. Daniel Ebersole is director of the Georgia Office of Treasury and Fiscal Services and president of the National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers. He is a past president of the National Association of State Treasurers and a current member of the Finance and Strategic Planning Committees of The Council of State Governments. Ebersole has been commissioner of the Georgia Merit System, senior executive assistant to Gov. Zell Miller, deputy director of the Office of Planning and Budget, and Senate research director.

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State Auditor Auditors of Public Accounts

Auditor of Accounts Auditor General Dept. of Audits and Accounts

Office of the Auditor Legislative Services Office —Legislative Audits Office of Performance Evaluations Auditor General State Board of Accounts Auditor of State

Legislative Division of Post Audit Auditor of Public Accounts Legislative Auditor State Auditor Office of Legislative Audits

State Auditor

Auditor General Legislative Auditor State Auditor State Auditor State Auditor

Colorado ............................. Connecticut .........................

Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho ....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts ....................

Michigan ............................. Minnesota ...........................

State Auditor

State Auditor Office of the State Comptroller, State Audit Bureau State Auditor

New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York .............................

See footnotes at end of table.

North Carolina ...................

Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire ..................

Legislative Audit Division, Legislative Branch Auditor of Public Accounts Legislative Auditor Legislative Budget Assistant

Montana ..............................

Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Dept. of Examiners of Public Accounts Division of Legislative Audit Auditor General Legislative Auditor Bureau of State Audits

State Agency

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State or other jurisdiction

Table 4.27 THE STATE AUDITORS, 2005

Leslie W. Merritt, Jr.

Domingo Martinez Alan G. Hevesi

Richard L. Fair

Kate Witek Paul Townsend Michael L. Buckley

Scott A. Seacat

Thomas H. McTavish James R. Nobles Patricia Anderson Phil Bryant Claire McCaskill

A. Joseph DeNucci

Barbara J. Hinton Crit Luallen Steve J. Theriot Neria Douglas Bruce A. Myers

Rakesh Mohan William G. Holland Charles Johnson, III David A. Vaudt

Marion M. Higa Raymond Ineck

Joanne Hill Kevin P. Johnston, Robert G. Jaekle R.Thomas Wagner, Jr. William O. Monroe Russell W. Hinton

Ronald L. Jones Pat Davidson Debra K. Davenport Charles L. Robinson Elaine Howle

Agency head

N.A C, S S C, S

C, S S

C, S C, S S

C C

S C, S S N.A. S

Legal basis for office

C, S

C S C C, S C, S

C, S

State Auditor Deputy Comptroller —State Services State Auditor

C, S

C C, S

Auditor of Public Accounts C, S Legislative Auditor S Legislative Budget Assistant S Assistant State Auditor C, S

Legislative Auditor

Auditor of the Commonwealth Auditor General Legislative Auditor State Auditor State Auditor State Auditor

Legislative Post Auditor S Auditor of Public Accounts C, S Legislative Auditor C, S State Auditor Legislative Auditor S

State Auditor Supervisor of Legislative Audits Director Auditor General State Examiner Auditor of State

Auditor of Accounts Auditor General State Auditor

State Auditor State Auditors

Chief Examiner Legislative Auditor Auditor General Legislative Auditor State Auditor

Title

E

E E

L

E LC LC

LC

L LC E E E

4 yrs.

4 yrs. 4 yrs.

5 yr. term and until successor is appointed

4 yrs. Indefinite 2 yrs.

2 yrs.

8 yrs. 6 yrs. 4 yrs. 4 yrs. 4 yrs.

4 yrs.

Indefinite

ED E

(b) 4 yrs. (a)

N.A 10 yrs. 4 yrs. 4 yrs.

8 yrs. Indefinite

4 yrs. (a) Indefinite

5 yrs. 4 yrs.

7 yrs. (a) 5 yrs. N.A. 4 yrs.

Term of office

LC E L

N.A L G E

LC LC

E L L

L L

L L LC L G

Method of selection

★ ...

None

None None None None None

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★

★ ... ...

★ ... ... ...

...

...

... ... ★ ★ ★

None

2 None

N.A.

None None None

None

None None

... ★ ★ ... ...

None 2 None

None None None None

None None

... ★ ★ ... ...

N.A ... ... ★

N.A ... ... ★

None None

★ ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

None None None

... ...

★ ...

None None None

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ★

Maximum consecutive terms allowed

State resident

U.S. citizen

AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS


John Keel, CPA Auston G. Johnson Randy Brock Walter J. Kucharski Brian Sonntag Aaron Allred Janice Mueller Michael Geesey

Auditor of Public Accounts Office of the State Auditor Legislative Auditor Legislative Audit Bureau Dept. of Audit

Office of the Public Auditor Office of the Comptroller of Puerto Rico

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Guam ................................... Puerto Rico .........................

Title C, S C

Legal basis for office

S C, S C, S

S C, S

4 yrs. 10 yrs.

Indefinite 6 yrs.

LC GC E GL

4 yrs. 4 yrs.

(b) 4 yrs. 2 yrs.

8 yrs. 2 yrs.

4 yrs. (c) 4 yrs. (b) (b) 4 yrs. Indefinite

4 yrs. 4 yrs.

Term of office

L E

LC E E

L L

E SS E LC LC LC SB

E E

Method of selection

... ... ... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★

★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★ ... ... ...

... ...

★ ... ... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

None 2

★ ★

... ★

2 1

None None

None None

None None None

None No

None N.A. 2 None None None N.A.

Maximum consecutive terms allowed

State resident

U.S. citizen

GC—Appointed by governor, secretary of state and treasurer. GL—Appointed by the governor and confirmed by both changers of the legislature SB—Appointed by state budget and control board. C—Constitutional S—Statutory N.A.—Not available. (a) Serves at the pleasure of the legislature (b) Serves at the pleasure of a legislative committee. (c) Serves at the pleasure of the secretary of state.

Public Auditor Comptroller of Puerto Rico C, S

Auditor of Public Accounts C State Auditor C, S Legislative Auditor State Auditor C, S Director S

Auditor General Comptroller of the Treasury State Auditor State Auditor State Auditor

State Auditor and Inspector C, S State Auditor C Auditor General C Executive Director S Auditor General S Director S State Auditor S

State Auditor Auditor of State

Source: Auditing in the States: A Summary, 2003 Edition, The National Association of Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers, January 2005. Key: E—Elected by the public. L—Appointed by the legislature. G—Appointed by the governor. SS—Appointed by the secretary of state. LC—selected by legislative committee, commission or council. ED—appointed by the executive director of legislative services

Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Doris Flores Brooks Manuel Diaz Saldana

Martin L. Guindon John G. Morgan

Dept. of Legislative Audit Comptroller of the Treasury, Dept. of Audit State Auditor State Auditor State Auditor

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................

Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Jeff McMahan Cathy Pollino Jack Wagner Philip R. Durgin Ernest A. Almonte George L. Schroeder Thomas L. Wagner, Jr.

State Auditor and Inspector Secretary of State, Audits Division Auditor General Legislative Finance and Budget Auditor General Legislative Audit Council State Auditor

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ......................

Agency head Robert R. Petersen Betty D. Montgomery

State Agency

State Auditor Auditor of State

`

North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

State or other jurisdiction

THE STATE AUDITORS, 2004 — Continued

AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS

The Council of State Governments

287


AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS

Table 4.28 STATE AUDITORS: SCOPE OF AGENCY AUTHORITY Investigations

State or other jurisdiction

Authority to audit all state agencies

Authority to audit local governments

Authority to obtain information

Authority to issue subpoenas

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

★ ... ★ N.A. ★

★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

★ ... ... N.A. ★

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

★ ★ ★ (a) ★

★ ... ★ ★ (g)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

(a) ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

★ (b) ★ N.A. (a)

★ ★ (h) N.A. ★

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Legislative Auditor ........... State Auditor .....................

★ ★

Agency investigates Authority to specify fraud, waste Agency accounting principles for abuse, and/or operates local governments illegal acts a hotline ★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

... ... ... N.A. ★

★ ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

... ... ★ N.A. ...

★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

... ★ ... N.A. ★

★ ...

★ ★

... ★

... ...

★ ★

★ ...

★ (c)

(i) ★

★ ★

★ ★

... ★

★ ★

... ...

Mississippi .......................... Missouri .............................. Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada .................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (j) ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

New Hampshire .................. New Jersey .......................... New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ...................

★ ★ ★ (d) ★ ★

... (k) ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ★

North Dakota ..................... Ohio ..................................... Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Auditor General ................ Legislative Budget and Finance Cmte. ........

★ ★ ★ (e) ★

★ ★ (l) ★

★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ★

(b)

...

...

...

...

...

...

(m)

...

★ (s) ★ ★

(n) ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★

... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★

★ (o)

Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ................... Legislative Audit Council . State Auditor ..................... South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................

★ (q) ... ★ (r) N.A. ...

Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Legislative Auditor ........... State Auditor ..................... Vermont .............................. Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ......................

...

★ (f) ★ ★ ★ N.A.

★ ★ ... ... ★ N.A.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ N.A.

★ ★ ★ ... ★ N.A.

... ★ ★ ★ ★ N.A.

★ ★ ★ N.A.

... ... ... N.A.

Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming ............................. Guam ................................... Puerto Rico .........................

★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

... (p) ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★

See footnotes at end of table.

288

The Book of the States 2005


AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS

STATE AUDITORS: SCOPE OF AGENCY AUTHORITY — Continued Sources: Auditing in the States, 2003 Edition, The National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers 2003. Key: ★— Provision for responsibility. . . .—No provision for responsibility. N.A.—Not available. (a) The legislature or legislative branch is excluded from audit authority. (b) The legislative and judicial branches are excluded from audit authority. (c) State agencies are audited by the Office of Legislative Auditor. (d) The Gaming Commission, Mortgage Finance Authority, State Lottery Commission, Student Loan Guarantee Corporation are excluded from audit authority. (e) Higher education and most public trusts are only audited upon request by various authorities. Commissioners of the Land Office are excluded since the State Auditor and Inspector serve on this commission. (f) State Retirement and Worker’s Compensation Fund are excluded from audit authority. (g) All local governments are excluded from audit authority, except Public School Systems and Regional and Local libraries.

(h) Performs only investigative audits of local governments. (i) Financial audits of local governments are excluded from audit authority. (j) All local governments excluded but municipalities. (k) Entities not receiving state aid or state grants and school districts receiving less than 80% funding from the state are excluded from audit authority. (l) The State Auditor and Inspector have the authority to audit counties, Generally, cities, towns, school districts, fire protection districts, rural water districts can be audited upon request by citizen petition or various authorities. (m) No local governments are specifically excluded, but the agency goes in on orders from the Joint Cmte. and Legislative Services. (n) County, school districts, special purpose districts are excluded from audit authority. (o) Comptroller prescribes guidelines but SAO has responsibility to review and comment. (p) Set by statute. (q) Municipalities not covered. (r) Except for cities and towns, and certain special taxing districts. (s) Ports Authority, Public Service Authority, Research Authority and 16 technical colleges are excluded from audit authority.

The Council of State Governments

289


290

The Book of the States 2005 ★ ★ ★ N.A. ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ N.A. ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ... ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Legislative Auditor .......... State Auditor .................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

See footnotes at end of table.

Single audit

Financial statement

State or other jurisdiction

Table 4.29 STATE AUDITORS: TYPES OF AUDITS

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ... ... ★

★ ★

... ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ★

★ ...

... ... ★ N.A. ★

... .. ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ N.A. ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... N.A. ★

Compliance only

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

Financial related

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★

★ ★

★ ★ ★ N.A. ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ N.A. ★

Economy and efficiency

... ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ★

★ ★

★ ... ★ N.A. ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ N.A. ★

Program

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

★ ...

... ... ★ N.A. ...

★ ... ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

... ★ ★ N.A. ...

Sunset

... ★ ... ... ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ...

★ ★

... ★ ★ N.A. ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ★ ... N.A. ★

Performance measures

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ... ★

★ ★

★ ★ ... N.A. ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... N.A. ★

IT

... ... ★ ... ★

... ★ ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

★ ...

... ★ ... N.A. ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ... ★

... ... ... N.A. ...

Accounting and review sources

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ... ...

★ ★

... ★ ★ N.A. ...

“. . . ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ★ N.A. ...

Agreed upon procedures

... (i) ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

(g) ... (h) ...

(f) ...

... ... ... ... (e)

(b) (d) ... ... ...

... ... ... (c) ...

... ... (a) N.A. (b)

Other audits

AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS


★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ N.A. ★ ...

... ...

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Guam ................................... Puerto Rico ......................... ... ★

... ... N.A. ... ★

... ... ★

... ★ ★

... ...

... ★

★ ★

Compliance only

★ ★

... ★ N.A. ★ ... ... ...

... ★ N.A. ... ...

★ ... ...

... ★ ...

... ...

... ...

...

... ...

Sunset

... ...

★ ★ N.A. ... ★

★ ... ★

... ... ★

... ...

... ...

... ...

Performance measures

... ★

★ ★ N.A. ★ ...

... ... ★

... ★ ★

... ...

... ★

★ ★

IT

... ...

... ... N.A. ... ...

... ... ★

... ★ ★

... ...

... ...

...

... ★

Accounting and review sources

... ...

★ ★ N.A. ★ ★

... ★ ★

★ ★ ★

... ★

... ...

...

★ ★

Agreed upon procedures

(b) ...

... ... N.A. ... ...

... (o) ...

... (m) (n)

... ...

... ...

(l)

(j) (k)

Other audits

(c) Attestation engagements. (d) Sunset analyses, mandatory health insurance analyses. (e) Federal grant audits. (f) Special requests and follow-up reviews. (g) Special investigation reviews. (h) Investigations and best practices reviews. (i) Performance reviews. (j) Internal control reviews: studies. (k) Quality assurance reviews. (l) Fraud investigations. (m) Informational reports, including referrals or investigation or fraud. (n) Special investigations. (o) Internal controls review, investigative, management advisory, training and other educational services. (p) Special projects, consulting, feasibility studies.

★ ★

... ... N.A. ★ ...

★ ... ★

★ ... ★

★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ...

★ ★

... ★ ★

...

★ ★

Program

★ ★

Economy and efficiency

Sources: Auditing in the States: A Summary, 2003 edition. The National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers. Note: Government audits are divided into two types, financial and performance audits. Financial audits include financial statement audits and financial related audits. Performance audits include economy and efficiency audits and program audits. In addition, government auditors perform a number of other audit-related functions that do not fall into one of these categories. State audit agencies must make certainthat audit coverage is broad enough to fulfill the needs of potential audit report users. Key: ★—Provision for responsibility. . . .—No provision for responsibility. N.A.—Not available. (a) Fraud, special audits, studies, and program evaluations. (b) Investigations.

... ★ ★

★ ★ ★

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Legislative Auditor .......... State Auditor .................... Vermont ..............................

... ...

... ...

... ★

... ★

★ ...

... ★

... ★

... ★

★ ★ N.A. ★ ★

★ ★ N.A. ★ ...

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Auditor General ............... Legislative Budget and Finance Cmte. ....... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ................... Legislative Audit Council State Auditor ....................

Financial related

Single audit

Financial statement

`

State or other jurisdiction

STATE AUDITORS: TYPES OF AUDITS — Continued

AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS

The Council of State Governments

291


292

The Book of the States 2005

Office of the State Controller Office of the Comptroller Dept. of Finance Dept. of Financial Services Office of Treasury and Fiscal Services

Dept. of Accounting and General Services Office of State Controller Office of the Comptroller Office of the Auditor of State State Accounting Enterprise

Division of Accounts and Reports Office of the Controller Division of Administration

Bureau of Accounts and Controls Office of the Comptroller

Office of the Comptroller Office of Financial Management Department of Finance Department of Finance and Administration Division of Accounting

Administrative Financial Services Division Accounting Division

Office of the State Controller Division of Accounting Services

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii .................................

Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................

Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi ..........................

Montana ..............................

Nevada ................................. New Hampshire ..................

See footnotes at end of table.

Nebraska .............................

Missouri ..............................

California ............................

Agency or office

Office of the State Comptroller Division of Finance Financial Services Division Dept. of Finance and Administration Office of the State Controller

State

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas .............................

Table 4.30 THE STATE COMPTROLLERS, 2005

Name Title

State Accounting Administrator State Controller Comptroller

Paul Carlson

Director

Comptroller Director Commissioner Executive Director

Director Controller Commissioner of Administration State Controller State Comptroller

Administrator

Kathy Augustine (R) Sheri Rockburn

S

S C S C S

C

S S S S

Legal basis for office C S

S

S

C,S

S S S S

S C,S

S S S

State Controller C,S State Comptroller C Auditor of State C Chief Operating Officer S

State Comptroller

State Controller Comptroller Secretary of Finance Chief Financial Officer State Accounting Officer

State Controller

State Comptroller Director of Finance State Comptroller Director

Paul Christofferson

Thomas J. Sadowski

Martin J. Benison Michael J. Moody Peggy Ingison J.K. Stringer Jr.

Edward Karass William Donald Schaefer (D)

Dale Brunton Edgar C. Ross Jerry Luke LeBlanc

Keith Johnson (R) Daniel W. Hynes (D) Connie Kay Nass (R) Calvin McKelvogue

Russ K. Satio

Leslie Shenefelt Nancy Wyman (D) David W. Singleton Tom Gallagher (R) Lynn Vellinga

Steve Westly (D)

Robert L. Childree Kim J. Gamero D. Clark Partridge Richard Weiss

Method of selection E G

(d)

G

(d)

G SBD G G

(f0 E

(d) (f) G

E E E G

G

CS E G E SDB

E

(c) (d) (d) G

Approval or confirmation, if necessary ... ...

AG

...

...

... SBD AS AS

AG ...

... AG AS

... ... ... AS

AS

... ... AS ... SDB

...

AG AG AG ...

Date of first service 1/1999 8/2004

11/2000

6/2004

2/2005

1/1999 8/2002 2/2004 1/2004

4/2003 1/1999

10/2000 6/1975 1/2004

1/2003 11/1999 1/1999 7/2004

12/2002

7/2004 1/1995 1/2005 1/2003 10/2004

1/2003

5/1987 8/1999 4/2002 5/2002

Present term ends 12/2006 (b)

N.A.

N.A.

N.A.

1/2007 8/2004 1/2007 1/2008

1/2007 1/2007

N.A. N.A. 1/2008

12/2006 1/2007 12/2006 N.A.

(a)

(b) 1/2007 (a) 12/2006 (b)

1/2007

(b) (a) N.A. (a)

Consecutive time in office 6 yrs. 1yr.

4 yrs.

1 yr.

6 mos.

6 yrs. 3 yrs. 1 yr. 1 yr.

1 yr. 6 yrs.

4 yrs. 30 yrs. 7 yrs.

2 yrs. 6 yrs. 6 yrs. 1 yr.

2 yrs.

1 yr. 10 yrs. 6 mos. 2 yrs. 10 mos.

2 yrs.

18 yrs. 5 yrs. 3 yrs . 3 yrs.

Length of term 4 yrs. 4 yrs.

(g)

4 yrs. (a)

(g)

(j) (k) (a) (a)

(i) 4 yrs.

(b) (i) (a)

4 yrs. 4 yrs. 4 yrs. (a)

(a)

(b) 4 yrs. (a) 4 yrs. (b)

4 yrs.

(b) (a) (g) (a)

Elected comptrollers maximum consecutive terms 2 terms ...

...

...

...

... ... ... ...

... unlimited

... ... ...

2 terms unlimited 2 terms ...

...

... unlimited ... 2 terms ...

2 terms

... ... ... ...

Civil services or merit system employee ... ...

...

...

...

... ★ ... ...

... ...

... ... ...

... ... ... ...

...

★ ... ... ... ★

...

★ ... ... ...

AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS


Office of the State Auditor Division of Accounts Office of the Comptroller of Public Accounts Division of Finance Department of Finance

Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas ....................................

Name Title

State Controller and Director

Director/State Controller

David A. Von Moll Victor Moore Glen B. Gainier III (D) Andrew J. Fizer

Richard L. Sattgast (R) Jan I. Sylvis Carole Keeton Strayhorn (R) Kim S. Oliver James Reardon Comptroller Director State Auditor State Comptroller

State Auditor Chief of Accounts Comptroller of Public Accounts Director Commissioner

State Comptroller State Controller Director Director State Comptroller State Controller Deputy Secretary for Comptroller Lawrence C. Franklin Jr. State Controller Richard Eckstrom (R) Comptroller General

Alan G. Hevesi (D) Robert L. Powell Pam Sharp Thomas W. Johnson Brenda Bolander John J. Radford Harvey C. Eckert

Anthony I. Armijo

Charlene M. Holzbaur

Sources: Comptrollers: Technical Activities and Functions, 2003 Edition, National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers, 2005. Key: . . .—No provision for. C—Constitutional S—Statutory N.A.—Not applicable. E—Elected by the public. G—Appointed by the Governor. CS—Civil Service. AG—Approved by the governor. AS—Approved/confirmed by the Senate. SBD—Approved by State Budget Director.

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ......................

Department of Accounts Office of Financial Management Office of the State Auditor Division of Finance, Office of the State Comptroller

Office of Accounts and Control Office of the Comptroller General

New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio ..................................... Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ......................

Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Department of Finance and Administration, Financial Control Division Office of the State Comptroller Office of the State Controller Office of Management and Budget Office of Management and Budget Office of State Finance State Controller’s Division Comptroller Operations

New Mexico ........................

Agency or office

Office of Management and Budget

New Jersey ..........................

State

THE STATE COMPTROLLERS, 2005 — Continued

Legal basis for office

Method of selection G G E (d)

(d) G

E (f) E

(d) E

E G G G (e) (d) G

G

G

Approval or confirmation, if necessary GA ... ... AG

AG AS

... ... ...

... ...

... GA ... AS ... AG ...

N.A.

AS

Date of first service 11/2001 1/2005 1/1993 7/2002

4/1996 2/2005

1/2003 12/1995 1/1999

8/1986 1/2003

1/2003 7/2001 1/2003 1/1999 12/2001 11/1989 3/1983

1/1991

10/1999

Present term ends (a) N.A. 1/2005 N.A.

N.A. 2/2009

1/2007 N.A. 1/2007

N.A. 1/2007

12/2006 7/2008 (a) 1/2007 (b) (b) (b)

(b)

(b)

Consecutive time in office 3 yrs. 7 mos. 13 yrs. 3 yrs.

8 yrs. 6 mos.

2 yrs. 9 yrs. 6 yrs.

18 yrs. 2 yrs.

2 yrs. 4 yrs. 2 yrs. 6 yrs. 3 yrs. 15 yrs. 22 yrs.

14 yrs.

5 yrs.

Length of term (a) (a) 4 yrs. (g)

(g) (a)

4 yrs. (b) 4 yrs.

(b) 4 yrs.

4 yrs. 7 yrs. (a) (a) (h) (g) (a)

N.A.

(a)

... ... unlimited ...

... ...

2 terms ... unlimited

... unlimited

unlimited ... ... ... ... ... ...

N.A.

...

Elected comptrollers maximum consecutive terms

GA—Confirmed by the General Assembly. SDB—Confirmed by State Depository Board. (a) Serves at the pleasure of the governor. (b) Indefinite. (c) Appointed by the Director of the Dept. of Finance (merit system position). (d) Appointed by the head of the department of administration or administrative services. (e) Appointed by the head of finance. department or agency. (f) Appointed by the head of financial and administrative services. (g) Serves at the pleasure of the head of the department of administration or administrative services. (h) Serves at the pleasure of the head of the finance department or agency. (i) Serves at the pleasure of the head of the financial and administrative services. (j) Two full terms coterminous with the governor. (k) Two-year renewable contractual term; classified executive service.

S C,S C S

S S

C S C,S

S C

C,S S S S S S S

N.A.

S

Civil services or merit system employee ... ... ... ...

★ ...

... ... ...

★ ...

... ... ... ... ... ... ...

...

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Table 4.31 STATE COMPTROLLERS: QUALIFICATIONS FOR OFFICE State

Minimum age

U.S. citizen (years)

State resident (years) (b)

Education years or degree

Professional experience and years

Professional certification and years

Other qualifications

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ★, 1 yr. ... ...

★ ... ★, 1 yr. ... ...

★, B.S. ... ★, B.S. ... ...

★, 6 yrs. ... ★, 7–10 yrs. ★ ...

... ... ★(a) ... ...

... ... ... ... (b)

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

★, 6 mos. ★ ... ★, 7 yrs. ...

★(i) ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

★, CPA ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

... ★ ★ ... ...

... ★(j) ★ ... ...

... ★, 2 yrs. ★, 3 yrs. ★(j) ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ,,, ...

... ... ...

...

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... . .. ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... (c) ... (d) ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★(k) ★(l) ... ★(k) ...

★, 7 yrs. ★, 7 yrs. ★ ★, 10 yrs. ...

... ★, CPA ... ★, CPA ...

... ... (e) ...

... ... ★

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

... ★(m) ... ... ...

... ★(n) ... ... ...

... ★, CPA ... ... ...

... ... ... (f) ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

30 ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ...

5 ★, 5 yrs. ★ ...

N.A. ... ★ ...

N.A. ... ★ ...

N.A. ... ... ...

N.A. ... (g) ...

N.A. ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ★ ★

... ... ... ★ (h) ...

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ★, CPA ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

★ ... ★ ... ...

★ ... ★ (j) ... ...

★, 1 yr. ... ★, 1 yr. ... ...

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★, 7 yrs. ... ★, 6 yrs. ...

... ★, CPA ... ★, CPA ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ★

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia— Office of State Auditor ..... Div. of Finance, Office .... of State Comptroller Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

... ★

... ★, Whole life

... ★

... ★ (o)

... ★

... ★, J.D.

... ...

★ ...

... ...

★ ★

★ ★

... ★, B.S.B.A.

,,, ★, 7 yrs.

... ...

... ...

... ...

... ★

... ★

... ★

★ (p) ...

... ...

★, CPA ...

... ...

... ...

Sources: Comptrollers: Technical Activities and Functions, 2003 Edition, The National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers, 2005. Key: ★—Formal provision. . . .—No formal provision. (a) Any of those mentioned or CFE, CPM, etc (b) 18 yrs. At time of election or appointment and a citizen of the state. (c) The Kentucky Revised Statutes state that The state controller shall be a person qualified b education and experience for the position and held in high esteem in the accounting community. (d) There are no educational or professional mandates, yet the appointed official is generally qualified by a combination of experience and education.

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No specific qualifications for office ★

★ ★

(e) At least 5 yrs. experience in high level management. (f) Education and relevant experience. (g) Qualified by education and experience for the position. (h) Master’s degree in accounting, finance or business management or public administration. (i) 5 yrs. or college degree. (j) Years not specified. (k) Master’s degree. (l) 4 yrs. and bachelor’s degree. (m) 4 yrs. with major in accounting. (n) 3 yrs. directing the work of others. (o) 7 yrs. and law degree. (p) Bachelor’s degree in accounting.


The Council of State Governments

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ... ...

N.A. ... ... ★ ★ ★ ★ (p) ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

N.A. ★ (m) ★ (o) ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

See footnotes at end of table.

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ (e) ★ ... ★

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

... ★(l) ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

N.A. ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★ (q)

N.A. ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ... ★ (a)

★ ★ (f) ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ (b) ★ ...

★ (a) ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

State

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Budgetary reporting

Disbursement of state funds

Appropriation control

Comprehensive annual financial report (CAFR)

Table 4.32 STATE COMPTROLLERS: DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

N.A. ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Maintenance of the general ledger and chart of accounts

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

N.A. ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Payroll processing

★ ... ★ (a) ★ ★

N.A. ★ ★ (n) ... ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ (h) ★

★ (d) ... ★ (g) ★ ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

Pre-auditing of payments

★ ... ★ ... ...

N.A. ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

★ ... ★ (k) ... ★

★ ... ... ★ (i) ★ (j)

N.A. ... ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

N.A ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ (c) ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Operation of statewide financial management Post-audit system

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

N.A ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ... ★

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

Management of state travel policies

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... ... ★ ★ ★

★ (u) ★

State

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia Office of State Auditor ..... Div. of Finance, Office .... of State Comptroller Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming ............................. ... ★ ★ ★

★ (y) ... ★ ... ★ ...

★ ...

★ ...

★ ★

... ★ (w)

★ ★

★ ...

★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

Payroll processing

★ (z) ★

★ ★

★ ...

★ ★ (r) ★ ★(t) ★

Pre-auditing of payments

★ ★

... ...

★ (v) ...

... ★ (s) ★ ★ ★

... ★

... ★

★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

Operation of statewide financial management Post-audit system

★ ★

... ★

★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

Management of state travel policies

(m) Responsibilities shared between Comptroller and Budget Director. (n) Responsibilities shared between office of the State Comptroller with delegation to state agencies and universities. (o) Responsibilities shared between shared Comptroller and Office of State Budget and Management (p) Responsibilities shared between State Controller and the Dept. of Administrative Services. (q) Responsibilities shared, Comptroller General issues warrants, Treasurer issues checks, colleges maintain their own systems and write their own checks. (r) Responsible for all departments that have not been authorized to do their own based own excellent performance. (s) Responsibilities shared between Division of Audits and Department of Audit. (t) Responsibilities shared between various agencies and the division of Finance. (u) Responsibilities shared between Comptroller and Dept. of Planning and Budget. (v) Responsibilities shared between Comptroller and Auditor (w) Responsibilities shared between Office of Financial Management and all state agencies. (x) Responsibilities shared between State Budget Office within the Office of the State Comptroller and the Office of the State Auditor. (y) Responsibilities shared between State Budget Office and the Office of the State Auditor. (z) Responsibilities delegated to state agencies by the State Controller’s Office.

★ ★

... ★

★ ★

NA ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★

Budgetary reporting

Maintenance of the general ledger and chart of accounts

Disbursement of state funds

Sources: Comptrollers: Technical Activities and Functions, 2003 Edition, The National Association of State Auditors, Comptrollers and Treasurers 2005. Key: ★—Formal provision; number of years not specified. . . .—No formal provision. A—Appointed by governor. (a) Responsibilities shared between Comptroller and Treasury. (b) Responsibilities shared between Department of Finance and State Treasurer’s Office. (c) Responsibilities shared between Department of Finance and the Auditor of Accounts. (d) Except for various autonomous agencies. (e) Responsibilities shared between Office of State Controller and the Division of Financial Management. (f) Responsibilities shared between Office of the State Controller and the State Treasurer’s Office. (g) Responsibilities shared between state agencies and the Office of the State Comptroller. (h) Responsibilities shared between agencies and the Office of the State Controller. (i) Responsibilities shared between Office of the State Controller and the State Auditor. (j) Responsibilities shared between Office of the State Comptroller and the Legislative Auditor. (k) Responsibilities shared between Dept. of Finance and the Office of the Legislative Auditor. (l) Responsibilities shared between Accounting Division and the Dept. of Administrative Services.

★ ★

★ (x) ★ (x)

Appropriation control

`

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STATE COMPTROLLERS: DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES — Continued

AUDITORS AND COMPTROLLERS


Chapter Five

STATE JUDICIAL BRANCH

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Trends in State Courts: Rising Caseloads and Vanishing Trials By David B. Rottman During 2004, alarms sounded in many states both because of the conduct of the 2004 judicial elections and where improving state finances did not translate into adequate funding for the courts. The losers are the members of the public and businesses with disputes for which they cannot obtain resolution. Introduction Americans think about their judicial system the way they think about the water departments in their towns: the local water department is absolutely essential, but only comes to people’s minds when something appears to malfunction: a water main explodes, water restrictions go into effect because of shortages, or reports of contamination set off alarms.1 The metaphor is apt. Several alarms sounded during 2004, triggered primarily by the manner in which candidates, interest groups and political parties campaigned in judicial races. The 2004 judicial elections continued trends first dramatically evident in 2000: heavy spending, heavy involvement by noncandidate groups2, and campaign conduct—especially by outside groups—that included sharply negative attacks which might be ordinary in nonjudicial elections but have with great care traditionally been barred from judicial races. While the 2004 elections signaled trouble ahead, they also provided some reassurance that the provisions built into the constitutions of all 39 states that elect judges to keep judicial races different from those held for the political branches of state government can be preserved (for an extended treatment of the 2004 elections, see the earlier article in this chapter, “2004 Judicial Elections”). During 2004 other alarms sounded in many states where improving state finances did not translate into adequate funding for the courts, interrupting the services the courts provide. The courts in most states have been left to accommodate the steady rise in their workload without securing a commensurate growth in resources. The losers are the members of the public with disputes for which they cannot obtain resolution. As in previous election years, the state courts were asked to resolve disputes concerning elec-

tions for legislative and executive branch offices. Prominent examples from 2004 include court challenges to election outcomes concerning the party controlling the Montana Legislature, the mayoral race in San Diego, and the governorship of Washington (still a trial court, with a jury trial set for May 2005). Inevitably, such disputes place the judiciary in the middle of a partisan political controversy that might affect subsequent relationships between the two branches.3 Court reform continued along mainly familiar tracks, including the longstanding movement toward court systems that are more centralized, streamlined, and funded at the state rather than the local level. Still more imaginative ways were found to respond to the needs of the growing number of citizens that prefer to represent themselves in court. For example, California’s network of support includes the provision of a family law facilitator in each county, family law information centers, five “pilot” models for self-help centers, and small claims advisors who assist litigants in these lawyer-free proceedings.4 Like water departments, courts need to anticipate changing demand for their service before alarms start to sound. Some signs that fundamental changes are taking place in the demand for court services were much discussed during 2004. Attention focused on the implications of what became known as “the vanishing trial” phenomenon, a sustained decline in the number of trials, both trials by jury and trials by judge, in the state courts.5

Trends in the Work of the State Courts Throughout the year, the state courts conducted their essential but little noticed mission of responding to demand by adjudicating nearly one hundred million cases brought to them by the public, businesses and government. Courts like water departments must adjust their supply to accommodate increases and changes in the location of demand. There The Council of State Governments

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STATE COURTS were signs in 2004 that trends in demand have been slowly reshaping the composition of disputes courts are asked to resolve and also the role of trials in to resolving those disputes. Rising Demand. Demand for court action continues to grow at a more rapid rate than the increase in the size of the general population. In 2002 (the most recent year for which statistics are available), 96.2 million cases were filed in the state courts. Traffic-related cases accounted for 60 percent of all cases filed, a proportion that has been steadily declining for some time as administrative agency proceedings replace court adjudication for many traffic offenses. There has also been a slow but steady shift in the nature of the demand on the courts. The proportion of civil cases (tort, contract, and real property) has increased at a slower rate than criminal and family-related cases (see Table A). The number of appeals filed in appellate courts has not increased as rapidly as that in trial courts. Still, in 2002, 278,000 appeals were filed in state appellate courts, an increase of 9 percent since 1993.6 A gap between demand and supply. The number of judges has not been increasing in pace with the rising case volume. The state judiciary grew by 5 percent between 1993 and 2002.7 Consequently, a gap is forming between the demand for court adjudication and the supply of judges to provide the adjudication. This gap is wider than might at first be assessed because the changes are replacing uncom-

Table A: Trends in State Trial Court Case Filings, 1993–2002 Civil cases ........................................................................... +12% Criminal cases .................................................................... +19 Domestic relations .............................................................. +14 Juvenile cases ..................................................................... +16 Traffic cases ........................................................................... +2

plicated, quick to resolve traffic cases with more complicated and time intensive criminal, civil and domestic relations case. Taking the long view. We need to step back still further in time to 1976, to gain sufficient perspective to join in the discussions, prevalent in 2004, of the future of the state courts. Issues of comparability over time and among states give us an incomplete picture of what has taken place. Still, we know that between 1976 and 2002, the number of criminal cases doubled, as measured in the 23 states for which reliable and comparable caseload information is available for the full time period. The cases in question were heard in courts of general jurisdiction, which primarily adjudicate felony cases. Much of the increase was recorded prior to the late 1980s (see Figure A). Civil cases increased at a slightly slower pace than

Figure A: Total Criminal Dispositions in 23 States, 1976–2002

Total Criminal Dispositions

3,000,000 +127% 2,500,000

2,000,000

1,500,000

1,000,000

500,000

0 1976

1978

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

2000

2002

Source: American Bar Association Note: Data are for the general jurisdiction courts of the 23 states selected because of the comparability over time in their caseload statistics.

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STATE COURTS criminal cases over the 1976–2002 period. However, the trend was distinct, with sharp increases in the late 1970s and early 1980s, followed up a precipitous climb in the number of cases until 1992. Over the last 10 years, civil cases are becoming less common in state courts of general jurisdiction (see Figure B). The “Vanishing Trial” Phenomenon. For reasons that remain uncertain, the number of jury trials (and bench trials as well in criminal cases) has declined since 1976 (see Figure C). There were 15 percent fewer jury trials in criminal cases in 2002 than in 1976 despite the just documented sharp increase in the number of such case being brought to the courts and a growing population. For most of the recent past, fewer and fewer criminal cases have been decided by a jury (or a judge) trial. The exception was the late 1980s and early 1990s when the number of jury trials increased, although not sufficiently to keep the proportion of criminal cases decided by a trial from declining. The pattern for civil juries in trial courts of general jurisdiction (basically tort, contract and real property cases) is different. The number of trials in 1976 was never subsequently equaled. Rather, in the face of rising civil caseloads, the number of trials remained relatively constant until the end of the 1990s. Most of the 32 percent decline in jury trials was recorded during those years. Reading the tealeaves. These trends outlining a

diminished role for the jury in deciding cases, especially for civil cases, have been treated as tealeaves through which the future of the state courts (and the courts generally because of similar trends in the federal courts) can be divined. Observers differ on the causes of the reduction in the use of juries and on how profound are the implications of these trends.8 Jury trials now account for 2 percent of all civil and criminal case dispositions in the state courts. Their significance for the justice system vastly exceeds what their proportion of dispositions might indicate because jury decisions set the parameters within which negotiated settlements are reached in the vast majority of civil cases that settle between the parties and the vast majority of criminal cases resolved by a plea agreement. What is happening in jury trials? In one scenario, litigants, their lawyers, and judges are responding to changes in the practice of law, one that gives emphasis to settlements and the less costly and time draining judicial determination of a summary judgment. In another less benign scenario, the state courts are no longer responding well to the demand for dispute resolution. Potential litigants are turning to dispute resolution like private judges (hired by the parties to the dispute) and mediation. In those forums, the courts often have limited, if any, oversight. One possible future for the state courts sees them assuming an expanded role in ensuring that private dispute resolution is fair and the underlying legal analyses contribute to the im-

Figure B: Total Civil Dispositions in 22 States, 1976–2002

3,500,000 +111%

Total Civil Dispositions

3,000,000

2,500,000

2,000,000

1,500,000

1,000,000

500,000

0 1976

1978

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

2000

2002

Source: American Bar Association Note: Data are for the general jurisdiction courts of the 23 states selected because of the comparability over time in their caseload statistics.

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Total Criminal Jury and Bench Trials

Figure C: Total Criminal Jury and Bench Trials in 23 States, 1976–2002

70,000 60,000 Bench Trials

-10%

50,000 40,000 Jury Trials

-15%

30,000 20,000 10,000 0 1976

1978

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

2000

2002

Source: American Bar Association. Note: Data are for the general jurisdiction courts of the 23 states selected because of the comparability over time in their caseload statistics.

provement of American law. The year of celebrity trials. Real jury trials may be on the decline but the public’s exposure to them is on the rise due to a series of celebrity trials. The year 2004 was rich in such trials, notably the criminal cases against Kobe Bryant, Scott Peterson and Martha Stewart and the pre-trial maneuvers for the Michael Jackson and Robert Blake trials: “Aside from the war in Iraq, the most frequently reported story on broadcast TV morning news shows last year was the Peterson Case.” In all, celebrity trial stories outnumbered those about the California gubernatorial recall by two to one.9 Such pervasive coverage makes the jury more visible than ever before, but in a form so far from typical as to be aberrations. The typical jury trial begins and ends on the same day, typically including the time required for jury deliberations.10 The citizen juror. The continuing importance of juries also is evident in the growing proportion of Americans who have served as a member of a jury. The best evidence from the late 1970s indicates that about some 6 to 10 percent of all American adults had served as a juror (that is, been sworn in as a juror on a specific case) compared to the 25 to 30 percent who can claim such experience today. A 2004 national survey found that 62 percent of all adults reported receiving a summons for jury service, with 29 percent having served as a jury member.11

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What underlies such a dramatic change? The catalyst that began the democratization process was the replacement in 1968 of the “key man” system in the federal courts, in which local jury commissioners handpicked the individuals who would be in the jury pool for each term of system. By 1973, all of the states had made the same change. Initially, the list of registered voters defined the jury pool. Over time, all but four states have expanded their source lists to include licensed drivers, utility customers, and state income tax payers. The jury also became more democratic as automatic exceptions from jury service, like that once given to all women and to members of various occupations were gradually greatly reduced or eliminated. The U.S. Supreme Court halted the practice through which lawyers would use their peremptory challenges (ones for which no reason had to be stated) to exclude African-Americans or other ethnic groups from a jury.12 The diversification of the jury pool is one so that it increasingly resembles the public at large is one of the great accomplishments of the American courts in the past 50 years. It is a cause to rejoice. Jury Democracy and Judicial Elections. A democratic jury is not to everyone’s satisfaction, however: “As the diversity of our society and its jurors has increased to the point that litigants can expect jurors unlike themselves, the pressure has risen to restrict

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STATE COURTS

Figure D: Total Civil Jury Trials in 23 States, 1976–2002

Total Civil Jury Trials

30,000 25,000 20,000 -32% 15,000 10,000 5,000 0 1976

1978

1980

1982

1984

1986

1988

1990

1992

1994

1996

1998

2000

2002

Source: American Bar Association Notes: Data are for the general jurisdiction courts of the 23 states selected because of the comparability over time in their caseload statistics.

the power of juries.”13 Indeed, the “hottest” 2004 judicial elections were fueled by claims that certain jurisdictions by virtue of their demographic makeup were inhospitable to corporate defendants, especially those from out-of-state. In some respects, the realization of the promise of a jury system in which all citizens participate has contributed to the animus with which judicial elections are being conducted today.

What Lies Ahead? State court workloads are on the rise. Current trends, such as reduced number of trial proceedings are unlikely to offer much relief. The three branches of government need to work out approaches, such as that pioneered last year in California, to provide stable funding for the courts. The courts, in turn, need to present a compelling case for their budget needs and then to monitor the effectiveness and efficiency with which the money so allocated is spent. There have been significant advances in the methodologies through which the courts can measure their resource needs and monitor their performance. Judicial and court staff workload assessments provide objective assessments of the number of positions needed to handle caseloads and identify where judicial and staff resources are “being allocated and used prudently.”14 CourTools offers 10 practical measures of court outcomes, including access and fairness; time to disposition, trial date certainty, and cost per case.15 There is ground for some optimism that such objective standards for establishing the need for court resources and accounting for the use of those resources

can be grounded in the demonstrable needs of the public and businesses for court resolution of disputes.

Notes 1 John Russonelo, “Speak to Values: How to Promote the Courts and Blunt Attacks on the Judiciary,” Court Review 41, 2, 2004. 2 Emily Heller, “Chamber Scores Big in Judicial Elections,” National Law Journal (November 8, 2004). 3 These election law cases are important to the democratic process, concerning issues such as ballot access, accurate vote counts, and voter challenges; they often must be resolved with considerable haste. The William and Mary Law School and National Center for State Courts have established an Election Law Program to offer assistance to state judges who are called upon to resolve legal issues involving election law. 4 Bonnie Hough, “Self-Represented Litigants in California: Court Programs Helping Litigants Represent Themselves”, Future Trends in State Courts 2004. Williamsburg, VA: National Center for State Courts, 2004. 5 The phenomenon was explored by the ABA Litigation Section’s Vanishing Trial Project, which culminated in a symposium in December 2003. 6 See O’Neill v Coughlan, Case No. 1:04CV1612 (N.D.OH 2004) (in which the court issued a temporary injunction to prevent the state from enforcing sanctions against a candidate for Ohio Supreme Court), 64. Available at http://www.legalaffairs.org/howappealing/ 20040914ONeillinjunction.pdf. 7 Brian Ostrom, Neal Kauder, and Robert LaFountain, Examining the Work of State Courts, 2003: A National Perspective from the Court Statistics Project, Williamsburg

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STATE COURTS VA: National Center for State Courts, 2004, pp. 10–11. 8 Brian Ostrom, Shauna Strickland, and Paula HannafordAgor, “Examining Trial Trends in State Courts: 1976– 2002”, Journal of Empirical Legal Studies Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 755–72 (NB: The entire issue is devoted to “The Vanishing Trial” phenomenon). 9 Glenn Garvin, “Jury is in: Celebrity Trials a Hit for TV”, The Miami Herald, June 14, 2004. The article notes that these celebrity cases have “created a whole new class of TV journalists, nomadic bands that wander from courthouse to courthouse”. 10 The best estimate of jury trial length is 13:30 hours in civil cases and 11:07 hours in criminal cases. Jury deliberations account for 1:55 hours and 2:45 hours, respectively, of those proceedings. See Dale A. Sipes and Mary E. Oram, On Trial: The Length of Civil and Criminal Trails, (National Center for State Courts: Williamsburg, VA, 1988). 11 Harris Interactive Market Research, Jury Service: Is Fulfilling Your Civic Duty a Trial? (A report prepared for the American Bar Association, August, 2004 (http:// www.abanews.org/releases/juryreport.pdf) 12 I am grateful to my colleague Paula Hannaford-Agor for this summary of factors underlying the post-1960s changes to the jury pool. U.S. Supreme Court decisions were the agents of much of the expansion in jury service: Taylor v. Louisiana (which ended automatic exemptions for women in 1975 and Batson v. Kentucky (prohibiting lawyers from creating all white juries) in 1986.

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13 Kenneth S. Klein, “Unpacking the Jury Box” 47 Hastings L.J. 1326. 14 The state of the art of such assessments can be found in two studies conducted on behalf of the Minnesota State Court Administrator’s Office by the National Center for State Courts. See Brian Ostrom et al., Minnesota Judicial Workload Assessment 2002 Williamsburg, VA: National Center for State Courts, 2003 and Minnesota Court Staff Workload Assessment, 2004, Williamsburg, VA: National Center for State Courts, 2004. 15 The measures are described at http://www.ncsconline. org/D_Research/CourTools/tcpm_courttools.htm.

About the Author David B. Rottman is a principal court research consultant at the National Center for State Courts, where he has worked since 1987. His current interests include judicial selection, public opinion on the courts, the evolution of court structure, and the pros and cons of problem-solving courts. He is the author of books on modern Ireland, social class and community courts. Rottman has a doctorate in sociology from the University of Illinois at Urbana, and previously worked at the Economic and Social Institute in Dublin, Ireland.

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STATE COURTS

2004 Judicial Elections By David B. Rottman and Roy A. Schotland Judicial elections in 2004 were in the spotlight again, mostly for the wrong reasons. Many campaigns were costly and negative in tone. A few candidates signaled how they would decide types of cases. Positive developments include new and active campaign oversight committees, and public funding for appellate candidates in North Carolina.

The Spotlight In 2004, judicial elections again drew unprecedented attention. Notable coverage included a Business Week cover story on “The Battle Over The Courts: How Politics, ideology, and special interests are compromising the U.S. Justice System.” The article dealt with “bitter polarization” in the process of appointing federal judges and in more and more of the 39 states in which judges face some type of elections: “This isn’t a problem just in a few places where court elections have become circuses.”1 Even overseas, The Economist headlined a story “Guilty, Your Honour?” “This year’s judicial elections may be worryingly free-speaking.... Judicial elections have grown more contentious, and so more costly, with business and lawyers’ groups spending huge sums in contests where tort law is at stake.”2

The 2004 Elections These reports got it essentially right. The 2004 judicial elections were near the levels they leapt to in 2000 and continued in 2002: heavy spending, heavy involvement by non-candidate groups (like the Chamber of Commerce on one side—active in 15 races spread across 12 states in 2004—and plaintiffs’ trial lawyers and unions on the other3), and campaign conduct—especially by the outside groups—that included sharply negative attacks which might be ordinary in non-judicial elections but are a dramatic departure from the era when these elections were “about as exciting as a game of checkers . . . played by mail.”4 Several striking features were new in 2004. In perhaps the most heated election, in which a West Virginia Supreme Court incumbent was defeated, an all-time record was set for an individual contribution in a judicial race—by the CEO of a coal company active in West Virginia and with one lawsuit pending before the Supreme Court and another that may reach there. The CEO (not himself a West Virginian) gave at least $2,260,000 (some reports say

his total involvement in the race reached $3.5 million) to “And for the Sake of Kids,” which attacked one 3–2 decision in which the incumbent had been in the majority.5 (The previous record was $200,000 in a 1982 Texas primary.6) The race was “noted for money and malice.”7 The candidates themselves raised $2.8 million and “527” groups spent, in total, an additional $4.5 million.8 In a new high for spending by judicial candidates, two running for one open Illinois Supreme Court seat spent $9 million (all in the general election and all in one down-state district), spending almost identical amounts. Interest groups spent $1,201,000 and political parties spent another $3,284,000 to run television ads to help or harm one of the candidates (also, two groups spent $195,000 on TV ads attacking the state Supreme Court itself for allegedly upholding unjustifiably high awards and pushing businesses and doctors out of the state9). After the election, the winner reflected on the spending: “That’s obscene for a judicial race. What does it gain people? How can people have faith in the system?”10 Overall, candidates alone spent more than $39 million on 44 contests waged in 20 states. When final spending is tallied, this figure will approach the $45 million spent in 2000 for 46 seats.11 Four incumbent justices of the 28 running in contested races were defeated, two in primaries. Non-candidates’ spending (parties and other groups) was approximately $10 million mainly in six states, compared to at least $16 million in five states in 2000.12 But the sky is not falling. Two positive steps taken toward keeping judicial elections different from other elections were notable: North Carolina became the second state granting public funds to judicial candidates, and 12 of the 16 candidates in appellate races participated, including four of the five winners.13 (Wisconsin has had some public funding for Supreme Court candidates since 1979.) North Carolina also became the first state east of Colorado to mail voter guides to all voters, with information about candidates.14 And in several states, new campaign conduct The Council of State Governments

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STATE COURTS committees initiated by state or local bar associations made major moves to improve the “culture” of these campaigns. In Georgia, the Committee for Ethical Judicial Campaigns was established in April 2004 to monitor and comment on judicial campaigns; this unofficial, independent committee’s members included lawyers, non-lawyers and leaders of diverse community groups. The committee sought to fill some of the gap created when the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals gutted Georgia’s law regulating judicial campaign conduct.15 The group intervened in a Court of Appeals race, rebuking a candidate for running misleading television ads. The rebuked candidate lost,16 but of course many factors contributed to that.17 In Illinois, a statewide oversight committee was also established for the first time, prompted by early concerns about what promised to be a nasty, noisy, and costly race. The State Bar Association subsequently established a Committee on Supreme and Appellate Campaigns. Each candidate complained to the committee about the other’s ad. The committee urged stopping both ads, but the ads went on.18 Nevertheless, the presence of such committees is a major advance. In 2000 and 2002, Ohio had the “poster case” problematic ads run by non-candidates. In 2002, protests by the state’s new monitoring committee and the candidates against ads on both sides drew much attention. In 2004, the races were hot enough that the candidates broke spending records— but there were no problematic ads.19 A closely watched question was how much candidates would, relying on a U.S. Supreme Court decision in 2002, campaign by announcing their views on disputed legal and social issues, or even appearing to promise a specific decision in certain types of cases.20 Some candidates indeed chose to speak freely, and by doing so won more press coverage-but so far, did not win more than that. The leading example involved a lower court judge who challenged an Ohio Supreme Court incumbent. His campaign included informing the voters of stands on various issues before the Supreme Court and of his political party affiliation. Although Ohio’s judicial candidates run in partisan primaries, there is no party label on the general election ballots and an Ohio Canon limits partisanship in the general election. When the candidate’s conduct led to a complaint filed with the official disciplinary body, the candidate won a federal-court injunction against any steps against him for the content of his campaign statements—and that won him substantial press coverage.21 However, of the three contests for Ohio Supreme Court seats, this candi306

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date lost by the widest margin, 60 percent–40 percent, although in another contest, the long time and highly regarded chief justice was challenged by a retired municipal court judge.22 Neither is the sky about to clear. In South Dakota, a proposed amendment to the state constitution would have ended contestable elections for trial court judges and made them subject, like the state’s appellate judges, to a “merit” screening for initial appointments, with subsequent retention elections. The amendment, which the legislature had approved almost unanimously, was rejected by 62 percent of the voters.23 Television ads, especially sponsored by non-candidates, were more pervasive in 2004. In 2000, TV ads ran in only four states’ judicial elections. In 2004, 15 states featured TV ads (10 for the first time) in their judicial elections at an estimated cost of over $21 million. Such ads—especially those run by single-issue or single-interest groups—are problematic because they encourage the public to think that judges are just like other elective officials, although even the states in which judges face contestable elections have an array of constitutional provisions that make the judiciary unique (e.g., far longer terms than any other officials). Judges swear an oath to decide cases based on the applicable law and the specific facts; very few judges ever have decisional leeway like U.S. Supreme Court justices. Targeting judges because of a single decision or issue continued in 2004, e.g. in five judges’ retention elections.24 A Kansas trial judge was targeted for defeat by a “Justice for Children Committee,” spearheaded by the mother of a rape victim. Others in the jurisdiction vigorously defended the judge as a respected, even-handed judge who made the appropriate legal decision.25 The judge was retained with 63 percent. An Iowa judge trial judge was targeted for defeat by a “Judicial Accountability Committee” for granting a “divorce” to two lesbians who had been joined in an out-of-state civil union. The judge was retained by 58 percent.26 And two Arizona judges targeted by “No Bad Judges.com” because of decisions on abortion, were retained by 68 and 69 percent.27 Also, a Missouri Supreme Court Justice whose retention was opposed by the “Missouri Family Network” because he had written “activist” opinions, was approved by 62 percent of the voters.28

What Lies Ahead? The Economist story noted, “There remains the old question: should judges be elected at all, rather than

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STATE COURTS appointed? Back in 1906 Roscoe Pound, a scholar at Harvard Law School, started a campaign to have judges appointed by saying: “Putting courts into politics, and compelling judges to become politicians, in many jurisdictions has almost destroyed the traditional respect for the bench.” When he spoke, 8 in 10 American judges stood for election. Today, the figure is 87 percent. Americans are still reluctant to accept that politicians should be chosen by the people, but not judges.” There is some irony to this state of affairs. The public clings to their right to elect their judges, but is just as convinced that the electoral process, especially raising campaign funds, damages courts at least by appearing to influence the judges’ decisions.29 We have had a trend from partisan to nonpartisan (19 states have made this switch, most recently Arkansas, Mississippi and North Carolina). Merit selection and retention elections, the great hope of mid-20th century reformers, has hit a wall of public resistance to diminishing voters’ role in selecting judges. New approaches relying on greater scrutiny of candidate qualifications as part of the nomination process has been recommended by the ABA and by New York’s Commission to Promote Public Confidence in Judicial Elections, but such a step remains untested and may prove to be heavily burdened by elitist associations.

Notes 1 Mike France and Lorraine Woellert, with (Brian Grow), Business Week, September 27, 2004, (Cover Story). 2 The Economist, July 24, 2004, at 28–9. Forbes Magazine ran a cover story on judicial elections. See “The Secret War on Judges,” Forbes Magazine, July 21, 2003 (cover story). The Forbes cover story was featured in a TV ad run on behalf of the incumbent in West Virginia. See http:// www.brennancenter.org/programs/buyingtime_2004/ storyboard_2004_index.html (third storyboard listed for West Virginia). 3 Emily Heller, “Chamber Scores Big in Judicial Elections,” National Law Journal (November 8, 2004). 4 William C. Bayne, “Lynchard’s Candidacy, Ads Putting Spice Into Justice Race,” Com. Appeal, Oct. 29, 2000, available at 2000 WL 27939675. 5 Contributions from Individuals and 2 organizations affiliated with Massey Energy Co. to And for the Sake of Kids, Center for Public Integrity, available at www.publicintegrity. org/527/. See also, Paul J Nyden, “Massey CEO’s Political Donations Questioned,” Charleston Gazette, 10\21\04. Because of that CEO’s contributions and unrelated reasons, motions (by both plaintiffs and defendants) to disqualify several West Virginia Supreme Court Justices from the cases involving the CEO’s company, are pending as we write. The company is involved in two cases: (1) In 2002, it was

found liable in a contract action for $50,000,000 (a judgment which, with interest, is now over $60,000,000); that may still be appealed to the Supreme Court. (2) The company is one of several defendants in an unrelated action for flood damages; although that matter has not yet gone to trial, the Supreme Court was asked to rule on an important pretrial issue and did so on Dec. 10, 2004, unanimously upholding plaintiffs’ position on some issues and defendants’ on other issues. The defeated incumbent did not participate because his son was a lawyer for plaintiffs. 6 Roy Schotland, “Elective Judges’ Campaign Financing: Are State Judges’ Robes the Emperor’s Clothes of American Democracy?,” 2 J. Law & Pol. 57, 148 (1985). 7 Heller, n. 3 above. 8 The figures are not yet final. Also, $800,000 of the total was raised by a candidate who lost the primary to the same incumbent. 9 www.stateline.org, Illinois report for October 21, 2004. 10 See 2004 State Supreme Court Election Highs and Lows, available at http://www.faircourts.org/files/ SC04StateTrends.pdf. 11 For 2000 figures see Roy Schotland, Financing Judicial Elections, 2000: Change and Challenge, 2001 M.S.U.D.C.L.L. Rev. 849, at note 6. 12 Buying Time 2004: Television Advertising in State Supreme Court Elections by State and Sponsor, Brennan Center Publication available at www.brennancenter.org. See also Schotland, n. 11 above. 13 The one successful, privately funded winner requested public funding but was deemed ineligible. 14 Also in Ohio, an online voter guide was available about judicial candidates. In December 2000, 17 chief justices called for such steps. Call To Action, 34 Loy. (L.A.) L.Rev. 1353, 1357 (2001); on voter guides, see Peter Brien, “Voter Pamphlets: The Next Best Step in Election Reform,” 28 Notre Dame J.Legis. 87 (2002). 15 See Weaver v. Bonner, 309 F3d1312 (11th Cir.2002), rehearing and rehearing en banc denied, 57 Fed.Appx. 416 (11th Cir. 2003). 16 According to some election day press interviews, some voters were “offended by the vast amount of money that [the losing candidate] had spent.” Others were offended by his ads. Jonathan Ringlel, “Bernes Trumps Big-Spending Rival,” Fulton County Daily Report, Nov. 29, 2004. 17 That committee’s intervention did raise an issue new for such groups: the need for recusal rules for oversight committee members. After the election, a reporter learned that one Committee member had been a leading supporter of a losing candidate who had opposed the primary winner, who in the general election was criticized by the Committee. Jonathan Ringel, “Ethics Group Hits Bumps in Monitoring Campaigns,” Fulton County Daily Report, Nov. 12, 2004. 18 Matt Adrian, State Bar Says Court Attack Ads Misleading, Ryan Keith, Associated Press, October 21, 2004. 19 For the first election year since 1995, when Ohio adopted an expedited disciplinary process, there were no proceedings against any judicial candidates. 20 In Republican Party of Minnesota v. White, 535 U.S. 765 (2002), the Court held unconstitutional Minnesota’s obsolete provision limiting what judicial candidates could

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STATE COURTS “announce”; only eight States had such a provision, the others having repealed it after 1990, when the Model Code of Judicial Conduct recommended repeal. The Court was explicit that the decision did not touch a different provision limiting candidates’ “pledg[ing] or promis[ing], and North Carolina has repealed such a provision, but naturally there are various views about the implication of what the Court did decide. 21 O’Neill Calls Supreme Court ‘Dead Wrong’ on School Funding, Press release by the William O’Neill for Supreme Court Committee, September 21, 2004. The press release said that the Judge “broke with legal precedent yesterday and became the first judge in Ohio’s history to exercise his constitutional right to speak out on an issue of controversy during a campaign.” 22 See O’Neill v. Coughlan, Case No.1:04CV1612 (N.D.OH 2004)(in which the court issued a temporary injunction to prevent the state from enforcing sanctions against a candidate for Ohio Supreme Court), available at http://www.legalaffairs.org/ howappealing/20040914ONeillinjunction.pdf. 23 South Dakota House Joint Resolution 1003 (HJR1003) passed 68–0 in the House and 27–7 in the Senate. In 2000, Florida voters rejected a similar ballot proposition, even more overwhelmingly. 24 In addition, two Illinois intermediate appellate judges were defeated for retention: Gordon Maag and Clyde L. Kuehn. In Illinois, the only state that requires a 60 percent affirmative vote for a judge to be retained, defeats are not uncommon. Maag was running at the same time for a Supreme Court seat, but lost that too; and Kuehn was a recent appointee to fill a vacancy. 25 A chronicle of the campaign itself, including articles and editorials, can be found at http://www.ljworld.com/section/ judgemartin. Judge Martin had faced retention twice before, securing approval both times, by 82 percent in 1996 and 78 percent in 2000. (See generally, http//www.ksos.org/ elections/election_statistics.html (for yearly general election results).) 26 It was the Judge’s first time before the electorate. The Judge enjoyed strong support from the State Bar Associa-

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tion, whose President after the election stated that he was “proud of voters” for “recogniz[ing] that our judges apply the rule of law and [do] not bend with the wind.” Frank Santiago, “Embattled District Judge to Stay on Bench,” Des Moines Register, November 3, 2004. 27 Ruelas, “Judges an unexpected target,” Arizona Republic, Nov. 1, 2004; and election results. 28 “Voters retain Teitelman, all other state judges,” St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Nov. 5, 2004. 29 A 2001 national survey of American adults found that nearly identical proportions of the American public believe that judicial campaign contributions influenced judicial decisions, and also favor electing their judges. David B. Rottman, “The White Decision in the Court of Opinion: Views of Judges and the General Public,” Court Review (Spring 2002), at 19.

About the Authors David B. Rottman is a principal court research consultant at the National Center for State Courts, where he has worked since 1987. His current interests include judicial selection, public opinion on the courts, the evolution of court structure, and the pros and cons of problem-solving courts. He is the author of books on modern Ireland, social class, and community courts. Rottman has a Ph.D. in sociology from the University of Illinois at Urbana, and previously worked at the Economic and Social Institute in Dublin, Ireland. Roy A. Schotland is a professor of law at Georgetown University Law Center and a senior advisor for the National Center for State Courts. He is a graduate of Columbia University and Harvard Law School and clerked for Justice William J. Brennan Jr. Schotland is the co-founder of the Chief Justices’ 2000 Summit on Judicial Selection and 2001 Symposium on Judicial Campaign Conduct and the First Amendment. He is also the co-author of three amicus briefs for the Conference of Chief Justices.

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5-1

309

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S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.J.C. C.A. S.J.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. C.A. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. C.C.A. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C.

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Oklahoma ...........................

The Council of State Governments

See footnotes at end of table.

Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Name of court

State or other jurisdiction

Table 5.1 STATE COURTS OF LAST RESORT

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★

★ ★

★ (l)

★ ★

9 5 7 7 5 5

5 7 7 5 (o) 7

7 7 7 5 7

7 7 7 9 7

7 7 7 7 7

5 5 7 5 7

★ ★ ★

7 7 5 7 7

★ ★ ★ (f) ★

★ ★

9 5 5 7 7

No. of judges (b)

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

By district

Justices chosen (a) At large

6 6 6 10 Life 10

8 14 8 10 6

8 6 (m) 6 To age 70 7 (n)

To age 70 8 6 8 12

6 8 10 7 10

10 6 10 10 (h) 8

10 8 12 6 6

6 10 6 8 12

Term (in years) (c)

By court By court By court Rotation by seniority Appointed by governor from Judicial Nominating Commission (i) Legislative election

By court Appointed by governor from Judicial Nomination Commission Popular election By Supreme and district court judges Popular election

Popular election Appointed by governor from Judicial Nominating Commission Rotation Appointed by governor with approval of elected executive council Appointed by governor, with consent of Senate

Appointed by governor (j) By court Popular election By seniority of service By court (k)

Rotation by seniority By court By seniority of service Appointed by governor Appointed by governor

Appointed by governor, with consent of Senate (g) By court By court Judicial nominating commission appointment By court

By court Legislative appointment (e) Appointed by governor, with consent of Senate By court By court

Popular election By court By court Popular election Appointed by governor

Method of selection

Chief justice

2 years 2 years 6 years Duration of term Life 10 years

2 years 14 years 8 years 5 years (p) 6 years

8 years Duration of service 2 years To age 70 Duration of service

To age 70 2 years 6 years Duration of service 2 years

Indefinite 4 years Duration of service 7 years Indefinite

10 years 4 years 3 years 5 years 8 years

Indefinite 8 years 12 years 2 years 4 years

6 years 3 years (d) 5 years 8 years 12 years

Term of office for chief justice

STATE COURTS

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310

5-1

S.C. S.C. S.C. C.C.A. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C. S.C.A. S.C. S.C. C.A. S.C.

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas ....................................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Dist. of Columbia ............... Puerto Rico .........................

310

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★(q)

By district

Justices chosen (a) At large

9 7

7 9 5 7 5

5 5 9 9 5 5

No. of judges (b)

15 To age 70

12 6 12 10 8

8 8 6 6 10 (s) 6

Term (in years) (c)

Sources: Number of judges from Court Statistics Project, State Court Caseload Statistics, 2003 (National Center for State Courts 2004). All other information from State Court Organization 1998 (National Center for State Courts); state constitutions, statutes and court administrative offices. Key: S.C.—Supreme Court S.C.A.—Supreme Court of Appeals S.J.C.— Supreme Judicial Court C.A.—Court of Appeals C.C.A.—Court of Criminal Appeals H.C.—High Court (a) See Chapter 5 table entitled, “Selection and Retention of Judges,” for details. (b) Number includes chief justice. (c) The initial term may be shorter. See Chapter 5 table entitled, “Selection and Retention of Judges,” for details. (d) A justice may serve more than one term as chief justice, but may not serve consecutive terms in that position. (e) Governor nominates from candidates submitted by Judicial Selection Commission. (f) Regional (5), Statewide(2), Regional based on District of Appeal

Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Name of court

State or other jurisdiction

STATE COURTS OF LAST RESORT — Continued

4 years To age 70

Indefinite 4 years 1 year Until declined 4 years

4 years 4 years 6 years 6 years (r) 4 years 6 years

Term of office for chief justice

(g) Judicial Selection Commission nominates. (h) Initial two years; retention 10 years. (i) With House and Senate confirmation. (j) Chief Justices are appointed, until age 70, by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Executive (Governor’s) Council. (k) Selection is typically rotated among the judges. (l) Chief justice chosen statewide; associate judges chosen by district. (m) More than three years for first election and every six years thereafter. (n) Followed by tenure. (o) A temporary court of appeals was established July 1, 1987 to exercise appellate and original jurisdiction was delegated by the supreme court. This court does not sit, has no assigned judges, has heard no appeals and is currently unfunded. (p) Or expiration of term, whichever is first. (q) Initially chosen by district; retention determined statewide. (r) Presiding judge of Court of Criminal Appeals. (s) Initial three years; retention 10 years.

Judicial Nominating Commission appointment Appointed by governor, with consent of Senate

Seniority By court Rotation by seniority Seniority By court

By court By court Partisan election Partisan election By court Appointed by governor from Judicial Nomination Commission, with consent of Senate

Method of selection

Chief justice

STATE COURTS

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5-2

311

Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals ... Court of Special Appeals Appeals Court Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

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See footnotes at end of table.

North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Court of Appeals Appellate Division of Supreme Court Appellate Terms of Supreme Court Court of Appeals ... Court of Appeals

Intermediate Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Appellate Court Court of Appeals Court of Appeals

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

New Mexico ........................ New York .............................

District Courts of Appeals Court of Appeals

Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

... Court of Appeals ... ... Appellate Division of Superior Court

Court of Appeals Appellate Court ...

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware .............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

Court of Criminal Appeals Court of Civil Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals

Name of court

10 55 15 15 ... 68

... 6 ... ... 34

25 28 16 10 32

10 14 53 ... 13

4 3 52 (h) 15 (k) 9

62 12

16 9 ...

5 5 3 22 12 105

No. of judges

Intermediate appellate court

Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Alabama ..............................

State or other jurisdiction

Table 5.2 STATE INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURTS AND GENERAL TRIAL COURTS: NUMBER OF JUDGES AND TERMS

8 5 (y) 5 (y) 8 ... 6

... 6 (s) ... ... 7 (v)

(p) 6 6 8 12

4 8 10 ... 10

10 6 10 10 (l) 6

6 6

10 8 ...

6 6 10 6 8 12

Term (years)

District Court Supreme Court County Court Superior Court District Court Court of Common Pleas

District Court District Court District Court Superior Court Superior Court

Superior Court Circuit Court District Court Circuit Court Circuit Court

District Court Circuit Court District Court Superior Court Circuit Court

Circuit Court District Court Circuit Court Superior Court, Probate Court and Circuit Court District Court

District Court Superior Court Superior Court Court of Chancery Circuit Court Superior Court

Superior Court Superior Court Chancery/Probate Court and Circuit Court Superior Court

Circuit Court

Name of court

General trial court

72 346 (ii) 128 106 (aa) 42 (ll) 376

40 (r) 54 56 29 (u) 415 (w)

82 210 263 49 134 (q)

234 (n) 114 (dd) 230 (o) 16 146

30 (f) 39 (g) 492 (i) 296 179 (m)

132 (d) 180 19 (e) 509 188

32 (a) 159 115 1,498 (c)

142

No. of judges

6 (z) (z) 8 6 6

6 6 (t) 6 (p) 7 (x)

(p) 6 6 4 6

4 8 6 7 15

10 4 6 (j) 6 6

6 8 12 12 6 4

6 4 (b) 6

6

Term (years)

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Court of Appeals Court of Appeals ... Court of Appeals Court of Appeals ... Court of Appeals ... ... Circuit Court of Appeals

Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Dist. of Columbia ............... Puerto Rico ......................... ... 33

11 22 ... 16 ...

80 7 ...

... 12 12

9 ... 9

15

12 10

... 16

8 6 ... 6 ...

6 10 (ff) ...

... 8 8

10 Life 6

10

6 6

Term (years)

Superior Court Court of First Instance

Circuit Court Superior Court Circuit Court Circuit Court District Court

Circuit Court Chancery Court Circuit Court Criminal Court Probate Court District Court District Court Superior Court and District Court

Superior Court Circuit Court

District Court Circuit Court Tax Court Court of Common Pleas

Name of court

General trial court

58 328

150 175 65 241 17

38 33 85 31 2 418 70 (gg) 34 (hh)

22 (kk) 48 (cc)

228 (bb) 166 1 (jj) 409

No. of judges

15 12

8 4 8 6 6

8 8 8 8 (ee) 4 6 6

Life 6

4 6 6 10

Term (years)

(q) Plus 175 associate circuit judges, 15 family court commissioners, 1 drug commissioner, 4 probate and 3 deputy probate commissioners. (r) Plus five water judges and one worker’s compensation judge. (s) More than three years for first election and every six years thereafter. (t) The initial term is for three years but not more than five years. (u) Plus 10 full-time marital masters. (v) Followed by tenure. (w) 21 are surrogates that also serve as deputy superior court clerks. (x) On reapportionment until age 70. (y) Or duration. (z) Fourteen years for Supreme Court; 10 years for county court. (aa) Includes 13 special judges and there in addition 100 clerks who hear uncontested probate. (bb) This includes 73 district, 77 associate district and 78 special judges. (cc) Plus 22 masters-in-equity. (dd) Plus 54 domestic relations commisioners. (ee) Locally determined. (ff) Three years initial; six years retention. (gg) Plus seven domestic court commissioners. (hh) Plus 15 magistrates for Family Court. (ii) Plus 50 acting supreme court judges and 12 quasi-judicial staff. (jj) Plus six magistrates. (kk) Plus four magistrates. (ll) Plus 7.5 judicial referees.

No. of judges

Intermediate appellate court

Sources: National Center for State Courts, State Court Caseload Statistics, 2003 and State Court Organization, 1998. Key: . . .—Court does not exist in jurisdiction or not applicable. (a) Plus nine masters. (b) Circuit court judges serve four-year terms. Chancery probate court judges serve six-year terms. (Some judges serve both circuit and chancery courts). (c) Plus 414 commissioners and referees. (d) Plus 11 Water Court judges. (e) One chancellor and four vice-chancellors. (f) Plus 19 family judges. (g) Plus 83 full-time magistrate/judges. (h) Plus 9 circuit court judges assigned to the appellate court. (i) Plus 360 associate judges. (j) Associate judges four years. (k) Plus one tax court judge. (l) Two years initial; 10 years retention. (m) Plus 135 part-time magistrates, 12 associate juvenile judges, one associate probate judge, and six part-time alternate district associate judges. (n) Includes 74 magistrates. (o) Plus eleven commissioners. (p) To age 70.

... Court of Appeals Court of Criminal Appeals

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................

Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Superior Court

Pennsylvania ...................... Commonwealth Court ... Court of Appeals

Court of Appeals Court of Appeals

Name of court

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon .................................

State or other jurisdiction

STATE INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURTS AND GENERAL TRIAL COURTS — Continued

STATE COURTS

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STATE COUIRTS

Table 5.3 QUALIFICATIONS OF JUDGES OF STATE APPELLATE COURTS AND GENERAL TRIAL COURTS Years of minimum residence In state

In district

Minimum age

Legal credentials

State or other jurisdiction

A

T

A

T

A

T

A

T

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

1 5 10 (a) 2 ...

1 5 5 2 ...

... ... (b) (b) ...

1 ... 1 ... ...

... ... (ee) 30 ...

... ... 30 28 ...

Licensed attorney 8 years practice (c) 8 years practice 10 years state bar

Licensed attorney 5 years practice (d) 6 years practice/bench 10 years state bar

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

★ ★ ★ ★ (h) ★

★ (e) ★ ★ ★ 3

... (f) (f) (i) ...

★ (f) (g) ★ (j) ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... 30

5 years state bar 10 years state bar Learned in law 10 years state bar 7 years state bar

5 years state bar Member of the bar Learned in law 5 years state bar 7 years state bar

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

★ 2 ★ ... ...

★ 1 ★ 1 ...

... ... ★ (b) ...

... ... ★ ★ ★

... 30 ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

10 years state bar 10 years state bar Licensed attorney 10 years state bar (k) Licensed attorney

10 years state bar 10 years state bar ... ... ...

Kansas .................................

...

...

...

30

...

Kentucky .............................

2

2

2

2

...

...

Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

2 ... 5

2 ... 5

2 ... 6 mos.

2 ... 6 mos.

... ... 30

... ... 30

10 years active and continuous practice (l) 8 years state bar and licensed attorney 5 years state bar Learned in law State bar member

5 years state bar Learned in law State bar member

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

... ... ... 5 (o)

... ... ... 5 (o)

... (b) (n) ... (b)

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... 30 30

... ... ... 26 30

... State bar member (m) State bar member 5 years state bar State bar member

No law degree required State bar member State bar member 5 years practice State bar member

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

2 3 (p) 2 ... ...

2 ... 2 ... (q)

... ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... (q)

... 30 25 ... ...

... 30 25 ... ...

5 years state bar 5 years practice State bar member ... Admitted to practice in state for at least 10 years

5 years state bar 5 years practice ... ... 10 years practice of law

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

3 3 ★ ★ ... N.A. ★ (p) ★ ★ (p) ★

... (s) ... ... (t)

★ (s) ★ ★ ★

35 ... ... ... ...

35 18 ... ... ...

10 years active practice (r) 10 years state bar State bar member License to practice law 6 years practice

6 years active practice 10 years state bar State bar member State bar member 6 years practice

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

... 3 1 ... 5

(u) 3 1 ... 5

1 ... (f) ... ...

★ (w) ★ ... ...

30 ... ... 21 32

... ... ... ... 32

5 years state bar State bar member State bar member License to practice law 8 years state bar

(v) State bar member State bar member State bar member 8 years state bar

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

★ 5 ★ 5 (aa) 5

★ 5 ... 3 5

★ ★ (x) ... ... ...

★ 1 2 ★ (bb)

... 35 35 30 ...

... 30 25 25 ...

State bar member Qualified to practice law (y) State bar member 5 years state bar

State bar member Qualified to practice law (z) State bar member 5 years state bar

... ★ 1 1 ... ★ 10 days 10 days ... ...

... ... 30 ... 30

... ... 30 ... 28

5 years state bar (cc) 10 years state bar 5 years state bar 9 years state bar

5 years state bar State bar member 5 years state bar 5 years state bar ...

90 days 90 days ... ... ... ...

... ... ...

... 30 ...

5 years state bar N.A. 10 years state bar

5 years state bar (dd) N.A. 7 years state bar

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming ............................. Dist. of Columbia ............... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico .........................

... ★ 1 1 5 ★ 10 days 10 days 3 2 ★ ... 5

★ ... ...

5 years state bar 8 years state bar

See footnotes at end of table.

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QUALIFICATIONS OF JUDGES — Continued Sources: National Center for State Courts, State Court Organization, 1998 and state web sites, November 2003. Key: A—Judges of courts of last resort and intermediate appellate courts. T—Judges of general trial courts. ★—Provision; length of time not specified. . . .—No specific provision. N.A.— Not applicable (a) For court of appeals, five years. (b) No local residency requirement stated for Supreme Court. Local residency required for Court of Appeals. (c) Supreme Court- ten years state bar, Court of Appeals - five years state bar. (d) Admitted to the practice of law in Arizona for five years. (e) State residency requirement for District Court, no residency requirement stated for Denver Probate Court, Denver Juvenile Court or Water Court. (f) Local residency not required. (g) Court of Chancery does not have residency requirement, Superior Court requires residency. (h) For District Courts of Appeal must reside within the territorial jurisdiction of the court (i) Initial appointment, must be resident of district at the time of original appointment. (j) Circuit court judge must reside within the territorial jurisdiction of the court. (k) In the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals, five years service as a general jurisdiction judge may be substituted. (l) Relevant legal experience, such as being a member of a law faculty or sitting as a judge, may qualify under the 10 year requirement. (m) Supreme Court: state bar member and practice at least five years. (n) No residency requirement stated for Supreme Court, Court of Appeals varies. (o) At the appellate level must have been a state voter for nine years. At the general trial court level must have been a state voter for three years. (p) No state residency requirement specified for Court of Appeals.

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(q) For Superior court: out of a total of 427 authorized judgeships (including thirty-two in the appellate division), there are restricted superior court judgeships that require residence within the particular county of assignment at time of appointment and reappointment; there are 142 unrestricted judgeships for which assignment of county is made by the chief justice. (r) Supreme Court and Court of Appeals: and/or judgeship in any court of the state. (s) No local residency requirement stated for Court of Appeals, local residency requirement for presiding judge of Supreme Court, Appellate Divisions. (t) No local residency requirement for Supreme Court, Court of Appeals requires district residency. (u) Six months if elected. (v) District Court: judges must be a state bar member for four years or a judge of court record. Associate judges must be a state bar member for two years or a judge of a court of record. (w) Local residency requirement for Circuit Court, no residency requirement stated for Tax Court. (x) Supreme Court: One justice from each of three divisions and two seats at large. Court of Appeals and Court of Criminal Appeals: Must reside in the grand division served. (y) Ten years practicing law or a lawyer and judge of a court of record at least 10 years. (z) District Court: judges must have been a practicing lawyer or a judge of a court in this state, or both combined, for four years. (aa) Supreme Court is five; Court of Appeals is three. (bb) No local residency requirement stated for Superior Court, District Court must reside in geographic unit. (cc) Supreme Court: State bar member; Courts of Appeals: five years state bar. (dd) Superior Court: Judge must also be an active member of the unified District of Columbia bar and have been engaged, during the five years immediately preceding the judicial nomination, in the active practice of law as an attorney by the United States, of District of Columbia government. (ee) Court of Appeals minimum age is 30.

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Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Judicial Court Court of Appeals Supreme Judicial Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Court of Appeals Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court

Colorado ......................... Connecticut ..................... Delaware ......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................

Hawaii ............................. Idaho ................................ Illinois .............................. Indiana ............................ Iowa .................................

Kansas ............................. Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ........................ Maine ............................... Maryland ........................

Massachusetts ................ Michigan ......................... Minnesota ....................... Mississippi ...................... Missouri ..........................

Montana .......................... Nebraska ......................... Nevada ............................. New Hampshire .............. New Jersey ......................

New Mexico .................... New York ......................... North Carolina ............... North Dakota ................. Ohio .................................

Oklahoma ....................... Oregon ............................. Pennsylvania .................. Rhode Island .................. South Carolina ...............

See footnotes at end of table.

Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court

Court of last resort

Alabama .......................... Alaska .............................. Arizona ............................ Arkansas ......................... California ........................

State or other jurisdiction

110,000 108,000 147,000 146,000 125,000

101,000 156,000 118,000 102,000 137,000

97,000 119,000 (i) 117,000 164,000

132,000 165,000 147,000 115,000 126,000

118,000 129,000 124,000 121,000 151,000

117,000 104,000 169,000 115,000 127,000

116,000 150,000 153,000 155,000 153,000

$153,000 118,000 129,000 136,000 191,000

Chief Justice salaries

107,000 105,000 143,000 133,000 120,000

99,000 151,000 115,000 99,000 128,000

96,000 119,000 (i) 113,000 159,000

127,000 165,000 134,000 113,000 123,000

115,000 124,000 118,000 105,000 132,000

116,000 102,000 169,000 115,000 123,000

114,000 138,000 147,000 155,000 153,000

(a) $118,000 127,000 126,000 176,000

Assoc. Justice salaries

Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Superior Court ... Court of Appeals

Court of Appeals Appellate divisions of Court of Appeals ... Court of Appeals

... Court of Appeals ... ... Appellate division of

Appellate Court Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals

Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals ... Court of Special Appeals

Intermediate Court Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals

Court of Appeals Appellate Court ... District Court of Appeals Court of Appeals

Court of Criminal Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals

Intermediate appellate court

Table 5.4 COMPENSATION OF JUDGES OF APPELLATE COURTS AND GENERAL TRIAL COURTS

103,000 105,000 141,000 ... 118,000

96,000 148,000 112,000 ... 120,000

... 113,000 ... ... 150,000

122,000 151,000 132,000 108,000 115,000

114,000 122,000 118,000 ... 127,000

112,000 101,000 159,000 110,000 122,000

112,000 137,000 ... 143,000 152,000

(b) $111,000 124,000 124,000 171,000

Chief/Presiding salaries

102,000 103,000 138,000 ... 117,000

94,000 144,000 111,000 ... 120,000

... 113,000 ... ...

117,000 151,000 126,000 105,000 115,000

111,000 119,000 112,000 ... 124,000

111,000 101,000 159,000 110,000 112,000

109,000 130,000 ... 143,000 152,000

(b) $111,000 124,000 122,000 165,000

Judges salaries

District courts Circuit courts Courts of common pleas Superior courts Circuit courts

District courts Supreme courts Superior courts District courts Courts of common pleas

District courts District courts District courts Superior courts Superior courts

Superior courts Circuit courts District courts Chancery courts Circuit courts

District courts Circuit courts District courts Superior courts Circuit courts

Circuit courts District courts Circuit courts Circuit courts District courts

District courts Superior courts Superior courts Circuit courts Superior courts

Circuit courts Superior courts Superior courts Chancery courts Superior court

General trial courts

96,000 96,000 124,000 120,000 114,000

90,000 137,000 105,000 91,000 110,000

88,000 110,000 (j) 106,000 141,000

113,000 140,000 118,000 104,000 108,000

100,000 114,000 106,000 103,000 120,000

107,000 96,000 146,000 90,000 112,000

105,000 125,000 140,000 135,000 (d)

(c) (h) $121,000 118,000 144,000

Salary

STATE COURTS

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Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Court of Appeals ... Commonwealth Supreme Court Supreme Court ...

Virginia ........................... Washington ..................... West Virginia .................. Wisconsin ........................ Wyoming .........................

Dist. of Columbia ........... Guam ............................... No. Mariana Islands ...... 125,000 145,000

168,100 (k) 130,000

144,000 (g) 135,000 95,000 130,000 105,000

$105,000 124,000 115,000 116,000 115,000

Chief Justice salaries

120,000 135,000

167,600 (l) 126,000

136,000 (g) 135,000 95,000 122,000 105,000

$103,000 124,000 113,000 114,000 110,000

Assoc. Justice salaries

Source: National Center for State Courts, Survey of Judicial Salaries (April 2004). Note: Compensation is shown according to most recent legislation, even though laws may not yet have taken effect. There are other non-salary forms of judicial compensation that can be a significant part of a judge’s compensation package. It should be noted that many of these can be important to judges or attorneys who might be interested in becoming judges or justices. These include retirement, disability, and death benefits, expense accounts, vacation, holiday, and sick leave and various forms of insurance coverage. Key: (a) Salary range is between $152,000 and $190,000. (b) Salary range is between $151,000 and $189,000. (c) Salary range is between $112,000 and $140,000.

Puerto Rico ..................... U.S. Virgin Islands .........

Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court Supreme Court

Court of last resort

South Dakota .................. Tennessee ........................ Texas ................................ Utah ................................. Vermont ..........................

State or other jurisdiction

90,000 ...

... ... ...

130,000 (g) 128,000 ... 115,000 ...

... $118,000 (e) 110,000 ...

90,000 ...

... ... ...

129,000 (g) 128,000 ... 115,000 ...

... ... (e) $109,000 ...

Judges salaries

Superior courts Territorial courts

Superior courts Superior courts Superior courts

Circuit courts Superior courts Circuit courts Circuit courts District courts

Circuit courts Chancery courts District courts District courts Superior/District/Family

General trial courts

Salary

80,000 135,000

158,000 100,000 120,000

126,000 122,000 90,000 109,000 100,000

$96,000 113,000 (f) 104,000 104,000

(d) Salary range is between $110,000 and $143,000. (e) Salary range is between $107,000 and $112,000, based on local supplements. (f) Salary range is between $102,000 and $111,000, Masters between $76,000 and $90,000, Associates $80,000 and $83,000, based on local supplements. (g) Plus $6,500 in lieu of travel, lodging and other expenses. (h) Salary range is between $109,000 andf $ 116,000, varies by location and cost of living. (i) Salary range is between $140,000 and $171,000 and may include longevity pay. (j) Salary range is between $100,000 and $159,000 and may include longevity pay and may be dependent on election clycle. (k) Salary range is between $128,000 and $161,000. (l) Salary range is between $126,000 and $154,000.

Appellate Court ...

... ... ...

Court of Appeals Court of Appeals ... Court of Appeals ...

... Court of Appeals Court of Appeals Court of Appeals ...

Chief/Presiding salaries

CONTINUED

Intermediate appellate court

Table 5.4 COMPENSATION OF JUDGES OF APPELLATE COURTS AND GENERAL TRIAL COURTS –

STATE COURTS

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Table 5.5 SELECTED DATA ON COURT ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICES State or other jurisdiction

Title

Established

Appointed by (a)

Salary

Alabama ......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ........................... Arkansas ........................ California .......................

Administrative Director of Courts Administrative Director Administrative Director of Courts Director, Administrative Office of the Courts Administrative Director of the Courts

1971 1959 1960 1965 1960

CJ (b) CJ (b) SC CJ (c) JC

$105,000 116,000 (g) 93,000 (h)

Colorado ........................ Connecticut .................... Delaware ........................ Florida ............................ Georgia ...........................

State Court Administrator Chief Court Administrator (d) Director, Administrative Office of the Courts State Courts Administrator Director, Administrative Office of the Courts

1959 1965 1971 1972 1973

SC CJ CJ SC JC

112,000 144,000 108,000 126,000 117,000

Hawaii ............................ Idaho ............................... Illinois ............................. Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................

Administrative Director of the Courts Administrative Director of the Courts Administrative Director of the Courts Executive Director, Division of State Court Administration Court Administrator

1959 1967 1959 1975 1971

CJ (b) SC SC CJ SC

90,000 97,000 159,000 99,000 121,000

Kansas ............................ Kentucky ........................ Louisiana ....................... Maine .............................. Maryland .......................

Judicial Administrator Administrative Director of the Courts Judicial Administrator Court Administrator State Court Administrator

1965 1976 1954 1975 1955

CJ CJ SC CJ CJ (b)

100,000 114,000 112,000 92,000 119,000

Massachusetts ............... Michigan ........................ Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

Chief Justice for Administration & Management State Court Administrator State Court Administrator Court Administrator State Courts Administrator

1978 1952 1963 1974 1970

SC SC SC SC SC

122,050 130,000 118,000 85,000 115,000

Montana ......................... Nebraska ........................ Nevada ............................ New Hampshire ............. New Jersey .....................

State Court Administrator State Court Administrator Director, Office of Court Administration Director of the Administrative Office of the Court Administrative Director of the Courts

1975 1972 1971 1980 1948

SC CJ SC SC CJ

87,000 103,000 100,000 96,000 150,000

New Mexico ................... New York ........................ North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ................................

Director, Administrative Office of the Courts Chief Administrator of the Courts Director, Administrative Office of the Courts Court Administrator (h) Administrative Director of the Courts

1959 1978 1965 1971 1955

SC CJ CJ CJ SC

96,000 148,000 108,000 89,000 115,000

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ............................ Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

Administrative Director of the Courts Court Administrator Court Administrator State Court Administrator Director of Court Administration

1967 1971 1968 1969 1973

SC SC SC CJ CJ

102,000 (i) 140,000 107,000 99,000

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas ............................... Utah ................................ Vermont .........................

State Court Administrator Director Administrative Director of the Courts (i) Court Administrator Court Administrator

1974 1963 1977 1973 1967

SC SC SC SC SC

92,000 118,000 98,000 104,000 104,000

Virginia .......................... Washington .................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ....................... Wyoming ........................

Executive Secretary to the Supreme Court Administrator for the Courts Administrative Director of the Supreme Court of Appeals Director of State Courts Court Coordinator

1952 1957 1975 1978 1974

SC SC (e) SC SC SC

128,000 116,000 88,000 115,000 87,000

Dist. of Columbia .......... Guam .............................. No. Mariana Islands ..... Puerto Rico .................... U.S. Virgin Islands ........

Executive Officer, Courts of D.C. Administrative Director of Superior Court

1971 N.A.

(f) CJ (m)

Administrative Director of the Courts Court/Administrative Clerk

1952 N.A.

CJ N.A.

158,000 90,000 70,000 96,000 85,000

Source: Salary information was taken from National Center for State Courts, Survey of Judicial Salaries (April 2004). Other information from State Court Administrator web sites. Key: SC—State court of last resort. CJ—Chief justice or chief judge of court of last resort. JC—Judicial council. N.A.—Not available. (a) Term of office for all court administrators is at pleasure of appointing

authority. (b) With approval of Supreme Court. (c) With approval of Judicial Council. (d) Administrator is an associate judge of the Supreme Court. (e) Appointed from list of five submitted by governor. (f) Joint Committee on Judicial Administration. (g) Salary range is between $101,000 and $163,000. (h) Salary range is between $ 168,000 and $185,000. (i) Salary range is between $87,000 and $117,000.

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Table 5.6 SELECTION AND RETENTION OF JUDGES Methods of initial selection State or other jurisdiction

Court

Appointive systems Gubernatorial Merit (a) or Legislative (b)

Elective systems Non-partisan Partisan

Initial term of office (years)

Method of retention (c)

Alabama ........................

Supreme Court Court of Civil App. Court of Crim. App. Circuit Court

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★

6 6 6 6

Re-election (6 yr. term) Re-election (6 yr. term) Re-election (6 yr. term) Re-election (6 yr. term)

Alaska ............................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Superior Court

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

3 3 3

Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (8 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term)

Arizona ..........................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Superior Court— county pop. > 250,000 Superior Court— county pop. < 250,000

★ ★

... ...

... ...

... ...

2 2

Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term)

...

...

...

2

Retention election (4 yr. term)

...

...

...

4

Re-election (4 yr. term)

Arkansas (d) .................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Circuit Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

8 8 6

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

California ......................

Supreme Court Courts of Appeal Superior Court (e)

... ... ...

G G ...

... ... ★

... ... ...

12 12 6

Retention election (12 yr. term) Retention election (12 yr. term) Nonpartisan election (6 yr. term) (f)

Colorado .......................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals District Court

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

2 2 2

Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (8 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term)

Connecticut ...................

Supreme Court Appellate Court Superior Court

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

8 8 8

(g) (g) (g)

Delaware (h) .................

Supreme Court Court of Chancery Superior Court

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

12 12 12

(i) (i) (i)

Florida ...........................

Supreme Court District Court of Appeal Circuit Court

★ ★ ...

... ... ...

... ... ★

... ... ...

1 1 6

Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term) Re-election for additional terms

Georgia ..........................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Superior Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

6 6 4

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Hawaii ...........................

Supreme Court

...

...

...

10

Inter. Court of Appeals

...

...

...

10

Circuit and Fam. Courts

...

...

...

10

Reappointed to subsequent term by Judicial Select. Com. (10 yr. term) Reappointed to subsequent term by Judicial Select. Com. (10 yr. term) Reappointed to subsequent term by Judicial Select. Com. (10 yr. term)

Idaho ..............................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals District Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

6 6 4

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Illinois ............................

Supreme Court Apellate Court Circuit Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

10 10 6

Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term)

Indiana ..........................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Circuit Court Circuit Court (Vanderburg Co.) Superior Court Superior Court (Allen Co.) Superior Court (Lake Co.) Superior Court (St. Joseph Co.) Superior Court (Vanderburg Co.)

★ ★ ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ★

2 2 6

Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (10 yr. term) Re-election for additional terms

... ... ... ★ (j)

... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ... ...

6 6 6 2

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Retention election (6 yr. term)

...

...

...

2

Retention election (6 yr. term)

...

...

...

6

Re-election for additional terms

Iowa ...............................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals District Court

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

1 1 1

Retention election (8 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term)

Kansas ...........................

Supreme Court ★ Court of Appeals ★ District Court (17 districts) ★ District Court (14 districts) . . .

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★

1 1 1 4

Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (4 yr. term) Retention election (4 yr. term) Re-election for additional terms

See footnotes at end of table.

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SELECTION AND RETENTION OF JUDGES — Continued Methods of initial selection State or other jurisdiction

Court

Appointive systems Gubernatorial Merit (a) or Legislative (b)

Elective systems Non-partisan Partisan

Initial term of office (years)

Method of retention (c)

Kentucky ....................... Supreme Court Court of Appeals Circuit Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

8 8 8

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Louisiana ......................

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

★(k) ★(k) ★(k)

10 10 6

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Reappointment by gov. subject to legislative confirmation Reappointment by gov. subject to legislative confirmation

Supreme Court Court of Appeals District Court

Maine ............................. Supreme Judicial Court

...

G

...

...

7

Superior Court

...

G

...

...

7

Maryland (h) ................

Court of Appeals Court of Special Appeals Circuit Court

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

(l) (l) (l)

Massachusetts (h) ........

Supreme Judicial Court Appeals Court Trial Court of Mass.

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

Michigan ....................... Supreme Court Court of Appeals Dist. Court/Circuit Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ★ ★

★(n) ... ...

8 6 6

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Minnesota ..................... Supreme Court Court of Appeals District Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

6 6 6

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Mississippi ....................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Chancery Court Circuit Court

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ...

8 8 4 4

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Missouri ........................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Circuit Court Circuit Court (Jackson, Clay, Platte & Saint Louis Counties)

★ ★ ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ★

1 1 6

Retention election (12 yr. term) Retention election (12 yr. term) Re-election for additional terms

...

...

...

1

Retention election (6 yr. term)

Montana ........................

Supreme Court

...

...

...

8

District Court

...

...

...

6

Re-election; unopposed judges run for retention Re-election; unopposed judges run for retention

Nebraska ....................... Supreme Court Court of Appeals District Court

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

3 3 3

Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term)

Nevada ........................... Supreme Court District Court

... ...

... ...

★ ★

... ...

6 6

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

New Hampshire (h) ..... Supreme Court Superior Court

★ ★

... ...

... ...

... ...

New Jersey ....................

Supreme Court

...

G

...

...

7

Reappointed by gov. (to age 70) w/ advice & consent of the Senate

Appellate Div. of Superior Court

...

G

...

...

7

Superior Court

...

G

...

...

7

Reappointed by gov. (to age 70) w/ advice & consent of the Senate Reappointed by gov. (to age 70) w/ advice & consent of the Senate

Supreme Court Court of Appeals District Court

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

(p) (p) (p)

New York ....................... Court of Appeals Appellate Div. of Supreme Court Supreme Court County Court

...

...

...

14

(i)

★ ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ★ ★

5 14 10

(r) Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

North Carolina ............. Supreme Court Court of Appeals Superior Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

★(s) ★(s) ★(s)

... ... ...

8 8 8

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

New Mexico ..................

Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (10 yr. term) Nonpartisan election (15 yr. term) (m)

to age 70 . . . to age 70 . . . to age 70 . . .

to age 70 . . . to age 70 . . .

(q) (q) (q)

See footnotes at end of table.

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STATE COURTS

SELECTION AND RETENTION OF JUDGES — Continued Methods of initial selection State or other jurisdiction

Court

Appointive systems Gubernatorial Merit (a) or Legislative (b)

Elective systems Non-partisan Partisan

Initial term of office (years)

Method of retention (c)

North Dakota ...............

Supreme Court District Court

... ...

... ...

★ ★

... ...

10 6

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Ohio ...............................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Court of Common Pleas

... ... ...

... ... ...

... ... ...

★(t) ★(t) ★(t)

6 6 6

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Oklahoma .....................

Supreme Court Court of Criminal Appeals Court of Appeals District Court

★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★

... ... ... ...

1 1 1 4

Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term) Re-election for additional terms

Oregon ...........................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Circuit Court Tax Court

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ...

6 6 6 6

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Pennsylvania ................

Supreme Court Superior Court Commonwealth Court Court of Common Pleas

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★

10 10 10 10

Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (10 yr. term)

Rhode Island ................

Supreme Court Superior Court Worker’s Compensation Court

★ ★

... ...

... ...

... ...

Life Life

... ...

...

...

...

Life

...

South Carolina .............

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Circuit Court

... ... ...

L (u) L (u) L (u)

... ... ...

... ... ...

10 6 6

Reappointment by legislature Reappointment by legislature Reappointment by legislature

South Dakota ................

Supreme Court Circuit Court

★ ...

... ...

... ★

... ...

3 8

Retention election (8 yr. term) Re-election for additional terms

Tennessee ......................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Court of Crim. Appeals Chancery Court Criminal Court Circuit Court

★ ★ ★ ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ★ ★

(v) (v) (v) 8 8 8

Retention election (8 yr. term) Retention election (8 yr. term) Retention election (8 yr. term) Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Texas .............................. Supreme Court Court of Criminal Appeals Court of Appeals District Court

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★

6 6 6 4

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Utah ...............................

Supreme Court Supreme Court Court of Appeals District Court Juvenile Court

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

(w) (w) (w) (w)

Retention election (10 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term)

Supreme Court

...

...

...

6

Superior Court

...

...

...

6

District Court

...

...

...

6

Retained by vote of Gen. Assembly (6 yr. term) Retained by vote of Gen. Assembly (6 yr. term) Retained by vote of Gen. Assembly (6 yr. term)

Virginia .........................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Circuit Court

... ... ...

L L L

... ... ...

... ... ...

12 8 8

Reappointment by the legislature Reappointment by the legislature Reappointment by the legislature

Washington ...................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Superior Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

6 6 4

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

West Virginia ................

Supreme Court Circuit Court

... ...

... ...

... ...

★ ★

12 8

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Wisconsin ......................

Supreme Court Court of Appeals Circuit Court

... ... ...

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

10 6 6

Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms Re-election for additional terms

Wyoming .......................

Supreme Court District Court

★ ★

... ...

... ...

... ...

1 1

Retention election (8 yr. term) Retention election (6 yr. term)

Dist. of Columbia .........

Court of Appeals

...

...

...

15

Superior Court

...

...

...

15

Reappointment by judicial tenure commission (o) Reappointment by judicial tenure commission (o)

Vermont ........................

See footnotes at end of table.

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STATE COURTS

SELECTION AND RETENTION OF JUDGES — Continued

Source: American Judicature Society’s, Judicial Selection in the States: Appellate and General Jurisdiction Courts, March 2005. Key: ★—Yes . . .—No (a) Merit selection through nominating commission. (b) Gubernatorial (G) or legislative (L) appointment without nominating commission. (c) In a retention election, judges run unopposed on the basis of their record. (d) In November 2000, Arkansas voters passed an amendment to the Arkansas constitution shifting judicial elections to a nonpartisan system. (e) The California constitution provides that local electors may choose gubernatorial appointments instead of nonpartisan election to select superior court judges. As of July 1999, no counties have chosen gubernatorial appointments. (f) If the election is uncontested, the incumbent’s name does not appear on the ballot. (g) Commission reviews incumbent’s performance on noncompetitive basis; governor re-nominates and legislature confirms. (h) Merit selection established by executive order in Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts and New Hampshire. In all other jurisdictions, merit selection established by constitutional or statutory provision. (i) Incumbent reapplies to nominating commission and competes with other applicants for nomination to the governor. The governor may reappoint the incumbent or another nominee. The senate confirms the appointment. (j) Three of the judges run in partisan elections for 6 years terms then have to be re-elected for additional terms. (k) Louisiana judicial elections are partisan in as much as the candidates’ party affiliations appear on the ballot. However, two factors lead a somewhat nonpartisan character to these elections: (I) primaries are open to all candidates; and (2) judicial candidates generally do not solicit party support for their campaigns. (l) Until the first general election following the expiration of one year from the date of the occurrence of the vacancy. (m) May be challenged by other candidates. (n) Although party affiliations for Supreme Court candidates are not listed

on the general election ballot, candidates are nominated at party conventions. (o) Initial appointment is made by the President of the United States and is confirmed by the Senate. Six months prior to the expiration of the term of office, the judge’s performance is reviewed by the tenure commission. Those found Well Qualified are automatically reappointed. If a judge is found to be qualified, the President may nominate the judge for an additional term (subject to Senate confirmation). If the President does not wish to re-appoint the judge, the District of Columbia Nominating Commission compiles a new list of candidates. (p) Until next general election. (q) Partisan election at next general election after appointment for eightyear term for appellate judges, six-year term for district. The winner thereafter runs in a retention election for subsequent terms. (r) Commission reviews and recommends for or against reappointment by governor. (s) Beginning in 2004, these elections are nonpartisan. (t) Although party affiliations for judicial candidates are not listed on the general election ballot, candidates are nominated in partisan party elections. (u) South Carolina has a 10 member Judicial Merit Selection Commission that screens judicial candidates and reports the findings to the state’s General Assembly. Since 1997, the Assembly is restricted to voting only on those candidates found qualified by the Judicial Merit Selection Commission. However, the nominating commission itself is not far removed from the ultimate appointing body, and cannot be considered to be nonpartisan as control over member nominations is vested in majority party leadership. Although most nominating commissions contain members appointed by the governor or legislature, no other commission actually contain the governor or current legislators who have final approval over the candidate as voting members of the commission. In contrast, the Judicial Merit Selection Commission in South Carolina contains 6 current members of the General Assembly appointed by the Speaker or the House of Representatives, the Chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee, and the President Pro Tempore of the Senate. State legislators also choose the remaining four members of the Commission who are selected from the general public. (v) Until next biennial general election. (w) First general election three years after appointment.

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The Judicial Discipline and Disability Commission, which is responsible for enforcing the Arkansas Code of Judicial Conduct, has the authority to investigate, as well as to initiate, complaints concerning misconduct of judges. After notice and hearing, the Commission may, by majority vote of the membership, recommend to the Supreme Court that a judge be suspended or removed, and the Supreme Court sitting en banc may take such action. The Commission on Judicial Performance investigates complaints of judicial misconduct and incapacity and may privately admonish, suspend, censure, retire, or remove a judge. The Commission’s decisions are subject to review by the Supreme Court. On the recommendation of the Judicial Discipline Commission, the Supreme Court may remove, retire, suspend, censure, reprimand, or discipline a judge. The Judicial Review Council investigates complaints of Judicial misconduct. If the investigation indicated that there is probable cause that the judge is guilty of misconduct, the Council conducts a hearing and makes a recommendation to the Supremem Court. The Supreme Court may suspend or remove the judge.

Judges may be removed, retired, or disciplined by a two-thirds Judges may be impeached by a majority of ... vote of the Court on the Judiciary. the House of Representatives and convicted by two-thirds of the Senate. On the recommendation of the Judicial Qualifications Commission, the Supreme Court may discipline, retire, or remove a judge. The Judicial Qualifications Commission may discipline, retire, or remove a judge. Removal and retirement decisions must be reviewed by the Supreme Court.

Arkansas .............................

California ............................

Colorado .............................

Connecticut .........................

Delaware .............................

Florida .................................

Georgia ................................

See footnotes at end of table.

The Supreme Court may censure, suspend, remove, or retire Judges may be impeached by a majority vote Judges are subject to recall election. a judge upon recommendation of the Commission on Judicial of the House of Representatives and convicted Content. by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges are subject to recall election.

...

...

Judges may be impeached by the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

...

Judges may be impeached by a two-thirds vote . . . of the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by the House of Representatives and removed by two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote Judges are subject to recall election. of the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by the Assembly and convicted by two-thirds of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by the House of Representatives and convicted by two-thirds of the Senate.

...

Arizona ................................

Judges may be impeached by two-thirds of the Senate and convicted by two-thirds of the House of Representatives.

Judges may be suspended, removed from office, retired , or censured by the Supreme Court upon the recommendation of the Commission on Judicial Conduct.

...

Recall

Alaska ..................................

Judges may be impeached.

Impeachment

The Judicial Inquiry Commission investigates complaints against judges and files complaints with the Court of the Judiciary. The Court of the Judiciary may censure, suspend, or remove a judge. Decisions of the Court of the Judiciary may be appealed to the Supreme Court.

Judicial conduct commissions, boards, councils

Methods of removal

Alabama ..............................

Table 5.7 REMOVAL OF JUDGES

...

...

...

Judges may be removed by the Governor on the address of two-thirds of the general assembly.

...

...

The Governor may remove judges for good cause upon the address of two-thirds of the members of both houses of the general as sembly.

...

...

...

Gubernatorial, Supreme Court and/or legislative

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On the recommendation of the Commission on Judicial Qualifications, the Supreme Court may discipline, suspend, retire, or remove a judge. The Commission on Judicial Qualifications has the authority to investigate complaints of Judicial misconduct and recommend to the Supreme Court that it retire, discipline, or remove a judge.

Judges of the Court of Appeals and District Court may be Judges may be removed by impeachment and . . . removed by the Supreme Court on the recommendation of conviction, as prescribed in Article 2 of the the Commission on Judicial Qualifications. The Commission Kansas Constitution. on Judicial Qualifications is authorized to investigate allegations of misconduct and to recommend a formal hearing. If the charges are proven by clear and convincing evidence, the Commission may admonish the judge, issue a cease-anddecease order, or recommend to the Supreme Court public censure, suspension , removal or compulsory retirement. After notice and hearing the Judicial Conduct Commission may admonish, reprimand, censure, suspend, retire, or remove a judge. The commission’s decisions are subject to review by the Supreme Court. On recommendation of the Judiciary Commission, the Supreme Court may censure, suspend, remove, or retirejudges.

Indiana ................................

Iowa .....................................

Kansas .................................

Kentucky .............................

Louisiana ............................

See footnotes at end of table.

The Judicial Inquiry Board files complaints with the courts Commission. After notice and hearing, the Commission may reprimand, censure, suspend, retire, or remove a judge.

Illinois ..................................

...

Judges may be impeached by the House of ... Representatives and removed by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by the House of Representatives and convicted by twothirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority of ... the House of Representatives and convicted by two-thirds of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by the House of ... Representatives and convicted by the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote . . . of the House of Representatives and removed by two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote . . . of the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

The Idaho Judicial Council investigates complaints against Idaho judges and may recommend to the Supreme Court the discipline, removal, or retirement of judges. The Supreme Court may review the recommendation of the Judicial Council and take additional evidence. The court may then reject the recommendation of the Judicial Council, or order discipline, removal, of retirement of the judge.

...

Idaho ....................................

...

The Commission on Judicial Conduct has the authority to investigate and conduct hearings concerning allegations of judicial misconduct or disability and to recommend to the Supreme Court that a judge be reprimanded, disciplined, suspended, retired, or retired.

Hawaii .................................

Impeachment

Judicial conduct commissions, boards, councils

Methods of removal

State or other jurisdiction

REMOVAL OF JUDGES — Continued

Recall

...

...

Supreme Court justices are subject to retirement upon certification to the Governor (after a hearing by the Supreme Court Nominating Commission) that the justice is so incapacitated as to be unable to perform his duties.

...

Judges may be removed by joint resolution of the General Assembly, upon the agreement of two-thirds of each house.

...

...

...

Gubernatorial, Supreme Court and/or legislative

STATE COURTS

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On the recommendation of the Commission on Judicial Performance, the Supreme Court may censure, remove, or retire a judge.

Mississippi ..........................

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See footnotes at end of table.

On the recommendation of the Judicial Standards Commission, the Supreme Court may retire, censure, suspend, or remove a judge.

After a public hearing and on the recommendation of the Board on Judicial Standards, the Supreme Court may censure, retire, or remove a judge.

Minnesota ...........................

Montana ..............................

On the recommendation of the Judicial Tenure Commission, the Supreme Court may censure, suspend, retire, or remove a judge.

Michigan .............................

On the recommendation of the Commission on Retirement, Removal, and Discipline, the Supreme Court may suspend, discipline, reprimand, retire, or remove a judge.

The Commission on Judicial Conduct investigates complaints of judicial misconduct. Following a formal hearing, the commission may recommend to the Supreme Judicial Court removal, retirement, or reprimand of a judge.

Massachusetts ....................

Missouri ..............................

Judges may be removed or retired by the Court of Appeals on the recommendation of the Commission on Judicial Disabilities.

The Supreme Judicial Court may retire, remove, or discipline judges upon recommendation of the Committee on Judicial Responsibility and Disability.

Maryland ............................

Maine ...................................

Judicial conduct commissions, boards, councils

REMOVAL OF JUDGES — Continued

...

...

...

Recall

Judges may be impeached by a two-thirds vote of the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

...

Judges may be impeached by the House of ... Representatives. Impeachments are tried by the Supreme court or by special commission in the case of impeachments of the Governor or a Supreme Court Justice. Convictions require the concurrence of five-sevenths of the court or commission.

Judges may be impeached by two-thirds vote . . . of the House of Representatives and removed by the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote Judges are subject to recall election. of the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote . . . of the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by the House of Representatives and convicted by the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority of the House of delegates and convicted by two-thirds of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by the House of Representatives and convicted by twothirds vote of the Senate.

Impeachment

Methods of removal

...

...

Judges may be removed by the Governor on the joint address of two-thirds of both Houses of the Legislature.

...

The Governor may remove a judge upon the concurrent resolution of two-thirds of the members of both Houses of the Legislature.

The Governor, with consent of the Governor’s Council, may remove judges upon the address of both Houses of the General Court. The Governor, with consent of the Governor’s Council, may also retire judges because of advanced age or mental or physical disability.

Judges may be removed by the Governor upon address of the General Assembly with the concurrence of two-thirds of the members of each House. Judges may also be retired by the General Assembly with a two thirds vote of each House and the Governor’s concurrence.

Judges may be removed upon the address by the Governor of both houses of the legislature.

Gubernatorial, Supreme Cout and/or legislature

STATE COURTS


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Based on the recommendation of the judicial qualifications commission, the Supreme Court may reprimand, censure, discipline, suspend, retire, or remove a judge.

The Commission on Judicial Discipline may discipline, censure, retire, or remove a judge. Commission decisions may be appealed to the Supreme Court. The Governor with the consent of the Executive Council, may remove judges for reasonable cause upon the joint address of both houses of the General Court. When the Supreme Court certifies to the Governor that a judge is so incapacitated that she/he cannot substantially perform his/her duties, a three-person commission is appointed to look into the matter. Upon the Commission’s recommendation, the Governor may retire the judge from office.

On the recommendation of the Judicial Standards Commission, the Supreme Court may discipline, retire, or remove a judge. Judges may be admonished, censured, retired, or removed from office by the Commission on Judicial Conduct. The Commission’s disciplinary actions are subject to review by the Court of Appeals.

On the recommendation of the Judicial Standards Commission, the Supreme Court may censure or remove a judge.

Nebraska .............................

Nevada .................................

New Hampshire ..................

New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................

New York .............................

North Carolina ...................

See footnotes at end of table.

Judicial conduct commissions, boards, councils

State or other jurisdiction

REMOVAL OF JUDGES — Continued

Recall

Judges may be impeached by the House of ... Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote . . . of the Assembly and removed by a two-thirds vote of the Court for the Trial of Impeachments. The Court consists of the President of the Senate, the Senators, and the judges of the Court of Appeals.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote . . . of the House of Representatives and removed by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote . . . of all members of the General Assembly and removed by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by the House of ... Representatives and convicted by the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote Judges are subject to recall election of the Assembly and convicted by a twothirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by majority vote ... of the legislature and removed with the concurrence of two thirds of the members of the court of impeachment. The Supreme Court sits as the court of impeachment, unless a supreme court justice has been impeached. In that case, seven district court judges are selected to try the impeachment.

Impeachment

Methods of removal

Judges may be removed for mental or physical incapacity by joint resolution of two-thirds of the members of the General Assembly.

Judges of the Courts of Appeals and justices of the Supreme Court may be removed by two-thirds vote of both houses of the legislature. Other judges may be removed by a two-thirds vote of the senate on he recommendation of the Governor.

...

Removal proceedings may be instigated by a majority of either House, by the Governor filing a complaint with the Supreme Court, or by the Supreme Court on its own motion. The Supreme Court conduct composed of private citizens appointed by the Court. The committee reviews all allegations of misconduct and either dismisses the charges or recommends a formal hearing. Based upon the hearing, judges may be reprimanded, censured and suspended without pay, or removed from office.

...

Judges may be removed by legislative resolution, passed by two-thirds of the members of both Houses.

Judges may be impeached by majority vote of the legislature and removed with the concurrence of two thirds of the members of the court of impeachment. The Supreme Court sits as the court of impeachment, unless a supreme court justice has been impeached. In that case, seven district court judges are selected to try the impeachment.

Gubernatorial, Supreme Cout and/or legislature

STATE COURTS

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On the recommendation of the Commission on Judicial Fitness and Disability, the Supreme Court may censure, suspend, retire, or remove a judge. The Judicial Conduct Board investigates complaints Judges may be impeached by the House regarding judicial conduct filed by individuals or initiated of Representatives and convicted by a two by the board. The board determines whether probable cause -thirds vote of the Senate. exists to file formal charges, and presents its case to the court of judicial discipline. The court has the authority to impose sanctions, ranging from a reprimand to removal from office, if the formal charges are sustained. The Commission on Judicial Tenure and Discipline reviews complaints against judges. Following a formal hearing, the Commission either dismisses the complaint or recommends to the Supreme Court that the judge be reprimanded, censured, suspended, removed, or retired. The Commission may also recommend the retirement of a judge for physical or mental disability.

The Commission on Judicial Conduct is authorized to Judges may be impeached by a two-thirds ... investigate complaints of judicial misconduct and incapacity. vote of the House of Representatives and Disciplinary counsel appointed by the Supreme Court evaluates convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate. each complaint and either dismisses the complaint or conducts a preliminary investigation. If evidence supports the complaint, a full investigation is authorized. If the investigation supports the filing of formal charges, a hearing is conducted, after which recommendation is made to the Supreme Court for sanctions, dismissal, transfer to inactive status, retirement, or removal.

Pennsylvania ......................

Rhode Island ......................

South Carolina ...................

Judges may be impeached by a majority of the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

...

...

...

Judges are subject to recall election.

...

Oregon .................................

Judges may be impeached by the House of Representatives and convicted by twothirds of the Senate.

Judges are subject to removal from office, or to compulsory retirement, by proceedings in the Court on the Judiciary.

...

Oklahoma ...........................

See footnotes at end of table.

Recall

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote Judges are subject to recall election. of the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Complaints alleging judicial misconduct may be filed with ... the Disciplinary Council or with a certified grievance committee of the Board of Commissioners on Grievances and Discipline, both of which have the authority to investigate and file formal complaints with the Board. If two-thirds of the members of the board believe there is substantial credible evidence to support the complaint, the Supreme Court appoints a commission of five judges to determine whether retirement, removal, or suspension is warranted. The Commission’s decision may be appealed to the Supreme court.

On the recommendation of the Commission on Judicial Conduct, the Supreme Court may discipline, censure, suspend, retire, or remove a judge.

Impeachment

Methods of removal

Ohio .....................................

North Dakota .....................

Judicial conduct commissions, boards, councils

REMOVAL OF JUDGES — Continued

Judges may be removed by the Governor upon the address of two-thirds of each house of the General Assembly.

...

...

...

...

Judges may be removed by a concurrent resolution of two-thirds of both Houses of the general Assembly.

...

Gubernatorial, Supreme Cout and/or legislature

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The Judicial Conduct Commission may reprimand, censure, suspend, retire, or remove a judge. The Commission’s decisions are subject to review by the Supreme Court. The Judicial Conduct Board investigates complaints of Judges may be impeached by a two-thirds ... judicial misconduct of disability and recommends any vote of the House of Representatives and necessary action to the Supreme Court. Possible disciplinary convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate. actions include public reprimand of the judge, suspension for a part or the remainder of the judge’s term of office, or retirement of the judge if physically or mentally disabled. The Judicial Inquiry and Review Commission investigates complaints of judicial misconduct or serious mental or physical disability that interferes with a judges duties. The Commission may conduct hearings and gather evidence to determine whether the charges are substantial. If the Commission finds the charges to significant, a formal complaint is filed with the Supreme Court of West Virginia. The Supreme Court may dismiss the complaint or it may retire, censure, or remove the judge. The Commission on Judicial Conduct investigates complaints . . . of judicial misconduct or disability and recommends to the Supreme Court that the judge be suspended, removed , or retired. The Supreme makes the final decision after reviewing the commission’s record and hearing argument on the matter.

Utah .....................................

Vermont ..............................

Virginia ...............................

Washington .........................

See footnotes at end of table.

The State Commission on Judicial Conduct investigates, Judges may be impeached by the House and if warranted, prosecutes allegations of misconduct. of Representatives and removed by twoUpon a Commission recommendation of removal or thirds vote of the Senate. retirement, the Supreme Court selects a review tribunal from among Court of Appeals judges to verify the findings and enter a judgment. Judges may appeal decisions of the review tribunal to the Supreme Court.

Judges may be impeached by the House of Delegates and removed by a twothirds vote of the Senate.

...

...

Judges may be impeached by a two-thirds ... vote of the House of Representatives and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

...

...

Texas ....................................

Judges may be impeached by the House of Representatives and convicted by twothirds vote of the Senate.

Upon recommendation by the Court of the Judiciary, the General Assembly may remove judges by a two-thirds vote of both Houses, with each House voting separately.

...

Tennessee ............................

Judges may be impeached by a majority of the House of Representatives and convicted by two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Impeachment

On the recommendation of the Judicial Qualifications Commission , the Supreme Court, after a hearing, may censure, remove, or retire a judge,

Judicial conduct commissions, boards, councils

Methods of removal

South Dakota ......................

State or other jurisdiction

REMOVAL OF JUDGES — Continued

Recall

Judges may be removed from office by joint resolution of the legislature, in which three-fourths of the members of each house must concur.

...

...

...

Judges may be removed by the Governor on address of two-thirds of the House and Senate. The Supreme Court may remove District Court judges from office.

...

...

Gubernatorial, Supreme Cout and/or legislature

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328

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The Judicial Hearing Board investigates complaints against judges and makes recommendations to the Supreme Court regarding the disposition of those complaints. The Court has the authority to censure, suspend, and retire judges. On the recommendation of the Judicial Commission and after review, the Supreme Court may reprimand, censure, suspend, or remove a judge. The Supreme Court, on its own motion or on the recommendation of the Commission on Judicial Conduct and Ethics, may censure, suspend, retire, or remove a judge. The Judicial Disabilities and Tenure Commission has the authority to suspend, involuntarily retire, or remove judges upon the filing of an order with the D.C. Court of Appeals.

West Virginia ......................

Wisconsin ............................

Wyoming .............................

Dist. of Columbia ...............

Impeachment

Methods of removal

...

Judges may be impeached by a majority of the House of Representatives and convicted by two-thirds of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by a majority vote of the Assembly and convicted by a two-thirds vote of the Senate.

Judges may be impeached by the House of Delegates and removed by a twothirds vote of the Senate.

Source: American Judicature Society, Judicial Selection in the States, March 2005. http://www.ajs.org Key: . . .—No provision for method. N.A. - Not available.

Judicial conduct commissions, boards, councils

State or other jurisdiction

REMOVAL OF JUDGES — Continued

...

...

...

Judges are subject to recall election

...

Recall

...

Judges may be removed by address of both Houses of the Legislature with the concurrence of two-thirds of the members of each House.

...

Gubernatorial, Supreme Cout and/or legislature

STATE COURTS

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Chapter Six

STATE POLITICAL PARTIES, ELECTIONS AND ETHICS



POLITICAL PARTIES

The Future of Political Parties in the States By Sarah M. Morehouse and Malcolm E. Jewell The increase in the level of two-party competition, particularly in the Southern states, has produced many parties which are cohesive and disciplined to capture public office and govern once that office has been attained. More parties are using preprimary endorsements to control nominations. They have become multimillion dollar organizations and contribute to their state candidates and rival the national parties in fundraising capability. Governors and their legislative parties are governing more effectively. The Party as Coalition Building A party is defined in terms of effort: collective effort directed toward capturing public office and governing once that office is attained. Most definitions of political parties as organizations assume the electoral and governing functions. Anthony Downs defined the party as “a team seeking to control the governing apparatus by gaining office in a duly constituted election,” essentially the definition that is used here (Downs 1957). Party organization matters. It matters to the candidates for governor whether they can count on party resources to win the nomination and election. It matters whether legislators identify with the party and commit to the platform because they can be counted on to support it in the legislative session. These are minimal conditions for political parties to fulfill, and they are possible under our state systems, because state political parties are alive and well but they are different in important respects from the state parties of the 1950s and even the 1980s. Fifty years ago, most state parties were poor and weak. The Progressive reformers of the early decades of the 20th century emasculated the 19th century state party machines, which controlled nominations, monopolized campaign resources and dominated the mobilization of voters. Because state political parties had been primarily labor-intensive organizations, dependent upon patronage for party workers and funds, they were slow to adapt to technologicallybased campaigning. At first, they could not provide the services to candidates that have become standard in contemporary campaigns. Candidates had to buy these services elsewhere, and thus they became expert at raising money, organizing their candidacies and running for office. Since that time, increased party competition and large-scale fundraising combined to strengthen party organizations. Now most state parties are multimillion-dollar organizations with experienced directors and knowledgeable staffs. They now provide sophisticated services to candi-

dates, including training, issue development, polling, media consulting and coordination of campaign assistance. With their greatly increased role in statewide, congressional, and state legislative campaigns, they supplement the candidates’ own campaign organizations and resources.

The Growth in Two-Party Competition The Civil War and Reconstruction had a massive and enduring effect on national and state politics, establishing Democratic domination in Southern states and Republican domination in most Northern states. From the end of Reconstruction until the start of the New Deal in 1933, most political developments had the effect of strengthening and reinforcing this one-party dominance in most of the states. The New Deal realignment in the 1930s destroyed the sectional base of American politics as well as Republican control over most Northern states. Under Franklin Roosevelt’s leadership, a new Democratic coalition was built in most northern states that included not only Catholic and ethnic group voters but a large proportion of the lower and middle-income voters in urban and metropolitan areas. The Democratic coalition also included the Solid South and Roosevelt consistently won every Southern state plus the border states by large margins. The most important changes in the New Deal Coalition since 1944 have occurred in the South. In the Southern states, the Republican Party was slow to take advantage of the success that Republican presidential candidates were enjoying. In 1952 Dwight Eisenhower carried four of the 11 Southern states and Republican presidential candidates won between three and five Southern states in the next four elections and in 1972, Richard Nixon carried all of the Southern states. But the Republicans did not elect a Southern governor until 1966, and it was not until the 1980 election that they held the governorship in more than two or three Southern states at The Council of State Governments

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POLITICAL PARTIES the same time. During the period from 1952 to 1978, the Republicans did not have a majority in any Southern legislative chamber, and in most of these legislatures they were heavily outnumbered by Democrats. In the 1980s and 1990s the most important changes in party alignments and competition were in Southern states. It has taken years to develop really competitive party systems in them. Republican parties had to get organized, enlist workers, raise money and recruit viable candidates. They had a head start in Tennessee, Florida, Virginia, and to some extent in North Carolina because of presidential campaigns and in both Tennessee and North Carolina because there had been pockets of traditional Republican strength in the mountain areas. These four states all elected Republican governors in the 1960s or 1970s, and all began to elect Republicans to about one-fourth of the legislative seats by the mid-1960s and 1970s. Republican parties were slow starters in South Carolina, Texas and Georgia. In the 1960s they had virtually no strength in the legislature and elected no governors (with Georgia and South Carolina Republicans not even running a gubernatorial candidate in 1962). But in the 1980s and 1990s, Republicans held the governorship more than half the time in both South Carolina and Texas. In the 1990s Republicans averaged over 40 percent of the legislature in these two states, and following the 1996 and 1998 elections they held a narrow majority in one of the legislative chambers in each state. By the 1990s, Republicans in Georgia had won onethird of the legislature and in 2002 they elected a Republican governor. In the remaining four deep Southern states—Alabama, Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana—the Republican Party lagged behind. They are less urban than most of the other Southern states. In all four states until the 1960s the Republicans generally ran no gubernatorial candidates or very weak ones. The first Republican governor in Arkansas was Winthrop Rockefeller, elected in 1966 and 1968, his victory resulted from his political skills and ample campaign funds. In Louisiana the Republicans did not elect a governor until 1979. The first Republican governor in Alabama was not elected until 1986 (and again in 1990). It was not until 1991 (and again in 1995) that the Mississippi Republicans elected a governor. Republicans in these four states were even less successful in electing members to the legislature. In 1958 there was not a single Republican in any of these four legislatures. In the 1980s and 1990s Republicans in these four states averaged control of the governorship 40 percent of the time, but all of these gov332

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ernors faced legislatures where the Democrats held at least two-thirds of the seats and often much more. The pace of Republican progress in the South accelerated in the 1990s. During the eight year period beginning with the 1994 election, Republicans controlled the governorship some of the time in every state except North Carolina. They controlled the governorship all of the time or a majority of the time in eight of the Southern states. Even more dramatic progress was made in the legislature. Republicans controlled the house or senate or both for some time during this eight-year period in Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Texas and Virginia. This expanded control was brought about by the party running more candidates for southern legislative seats and targeting more realistically the seats they had some chance of winning. Another important factor is that incumbents have a big advantage over other candidates in legislative elections. In the years ahead, an increasing number of Southern legislatures are likely to have close two-party competition for control. By 2000 in most Southern states the Republican Party held at least one-third of the seats. And in another one-third of the seats the party was well enough organized, had learned how to recruit candidates, and had enough support from voters to be competitive for control of the legislature (Jewell and Morehouse 2001, 33–37). Measuring Two-Party Competition. Measures of two-party competition differ depending on the offices that are included, the time period chosen and the method of aggregating the statistics that is used. We will concentrate on the partisan vote for governor and partisan strength in the state legislature to measure the breadth and depth of party strength. Austin Ranney designed a widely used and longstanding measure which includes those indicators of party competition for control of state government (1976, 59–60). His four components of inter-party competition are averaged over the time period: 1. The percentage of the vote for the governor’s office. 2. The percentage of senate seats won. 3. The percentage of house seats won. 4. The percentage of years the party controlled the governorship, the senate and the house. Ranney used these four components to calculate his index of interparty competition which have been updated for 1980–2000. The index is actually a measure of control of government, with a score of zero indicating complete Republican control and a score


POLITICAL PARTIES of 100 indicating absolute Democratic control. At its midpoint (50.00), control of government is evenly split between the two parties indicating a highly competitive state. In order to understand the current pattern of competition, we will look at data for the elections of 1980 through 2000 (which include five or six elections for governors who serve four-year terms and 11 elections for two-year legislative terms). The first column of data in Table A measures which party had the most control, with the states having the highest numbers being the most Democratic and those with the lowest being the most Republican. The actual numbers range from 80.8 to 25.1. (Nebraska is omitted from the table because its legislature is nonpartisan.) The states with scores from 80.8 to 60.7 are classified as Democratic; those with scores from 59.5 to 51.5 are close states leaning Democratic; those from 48.3 to 40.9 are close states leaning Republican; and those from 37.9 to 25.1 are classified as Republican. When we look at the first column in Table A the more obvious finding is that there are more Democratic states (19) than Republican states (only eight). The Democratic states include all but one of the 11 Southern states (Florida barely misses out). They also include several border states, such as West Virginia, Kentucky, Oklahoma and Missouri, and traditionally strong Northern states, such as Rhode Island and Massachusetts. The small number of states classified as Republican includes several Western and Southwestern (but not coastal) states, along with New Hampshire. The most competitive states include 12 that are leaning Democratic and 10 that are leaning Republican. In terms of geography, the 22 competitive states include a number of Northeastern, Midwestern and West Coast states, particularly those that are more urbanized. This table shows that over the period from 1980 to 2000 there were considerably more Democratic than Republican states. This pattern is misleading, however, because it ignores changes that occurred during the period from 1980 through the 2000 elections—specifically the Republican growth that took place during the later years. If we compare party control for the 1980–1994 period with that of the 1996-2000 period, we discover that 40 of the states became more Republican during the last three of those elections, only six became more Democratic and three were essentially unchanged. John Bibby and Thomas Holbrook’s classification which includes elections from 1999–2002, places only nine states in the Democratic category, and only three of them are

Table A: State Party Control and Two-Party Competition, 1980–2000 Party control

Party competition

Democratic States Maryland .......................................... Arkansas ........................................... Hawaii .............................................. Georgia ............................................. Louisiana .......................................... Mississippi ....................................... West Virginia ................................... Rhode Island .................................... Massachusetts .................................. Kentucky .......................................... Alabama ........................................... North Carolina ................................. Oklahoma ......................................... South Carolina ................................. Missouri ........................................... Virginia ............................................ New Mexico ..................................... Tennessee ......................................... Texas ................................................

State

80.8 79.2 78.7 77.7 76.5 75.8 75.4 74.9 73.4 72.9 72.6 67.2 66.4 62.6 62.6 62.2 62.1 61.6 60.7

692 708 713 723 735 742 746 751 766 771 774 828 836 874 874 878 879 884 893

Close States, Leaning Democratic California ......................................... Washington ...................................... Minnesota ........................................ Florida .............................................. Nevada ............................................. Connecticut ...................................... Maine ............................................... Oregon .............................................. Vermont ............................................ New York ......................................... Wisconsin ......................................... Delaware ..........................................

59.5 59.4 59.2 57.7 57.7 57.7 54.9 54.2 53.9 52.3 52.0 51.5

905 906 908 923 923 923 951 958 961 977 980 985

Close States, Leaning Republican Illinois .............................................. Michigan .......................................... Iowa .................................................. Alaska .............................................. New Jersey ....................................... Indiana ............................................. Montana ........................................... Ohio .................................................. Pennsylvania .................................... Colorado ...........................................

48.3 48.0 46.9 46.5 45.7 44.2 44.1 44.1 43.9 40.9

983 980 969 965 957 942 941 941 939 940

Republican States North Dakota ................................... Arizona ............................................. Wyoming .......................................... New Hampshire ............................... Kansas .............................................. Idaho ................................................ South Dakota ................................... Utah ..................................................

37.9 35.2 35.0 33.5 33.1 30.8 27.2 25.1

879 852 850 835 831 808 772 751

Source: Calculated by the authors using the Ranney Index components.

Southern states: Arkansas, Mississippi and Alabama (all three of which now have Republican governors). They say that in their four year time period: “the relative strength of the parties is nearly perfectly balanced: the vast majority of the states are competitive two-party states, and the number The Council of State Governments

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POLITICAL PARTIES of modified Republican states is nearly equal to the number of modified Democratic states.� (Bibby and Holbrook, 2004, 87). The second column of data in Table A measures how closely competitive each state was from 1980 through 2000. The same Ranney index data are used. But in this case those with the highest numbers had the closest two-party competition; those with the lowest numbers were most controlled by one party or the other. The scale can run from 1,000 for the most competitive to 500 for the least; the actual numbers run from 985 to 692. The stronger the control by one party, either Democratic or Republican, as shown in the first column, the less competitive the two parties will be and, thus, the lower the score for party competition as shown in the second column. The 22 most competitive states which have been labeled as close, have competition scores ranging from 905 to 985; the highest scores include Delaware, Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, New York and Iowa. As of the election of 2004, half of these states have Republican governors and half have Democratic governors. Does the existence of competition really matter to the operation of the political parties? Does it affect the kind of policy that is produced? The thesis with regard to the beneficial effects of two-party competition declares that it brings about parties that are cohesive and disciplined to combat the traditional enemy. This cohesion shows itself in the ability of the party to control nominations, to present a united front in the election, and, thereafter, to discipline the legislators to uphold the governor’s program to make a good record for the next election. It is generally considered that this type of competition-cohesion situation will benefit the have-nots in the political system because the political leaders would be more likely to act in their behalf than in a one-party situation in which their next election was assured. In a one-party situation in which the parties are not cohesive electoral units and are divided into one or more factions that do battle within the party, there is little responsibility. These claims will be investigated in this article, beginning with the ability to the parties to control nominations.

The Role of Parties in Nominations In about 22 states, party leaders and officeholders are able to exert influence over nominations. They make preprimary endorsements as a way to increase party control over the nomination or to guide the primary voters toward choosing a party-endorsed candidate. States with strong parties are most likely to have preprimary endorsing procedures (Morehouse 334

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and Jewell 2003, 55). The growth of the direct primary movement early in the 20th century turned over to the voters one of the major functions of political parties: the nomination of candidates. Some of the stronger political party organizations were able to delay adoption of direct primary laws for many years in states such as New York, Connecticut and Rhode Island. In such states and a number of others, strong party organizations adopted procedures enabling them to endorse the candidates they preferred before the primaries in an effort to control, or at least influence, the nominating process. These endorsements were usually made either in meetings of a state committee or in the conventions of delegates elected in local caucuses. Preprimary conventions have taken two forms. In some states, parties persuaded the legislature to establish a legal foundation for the endorsement process. Some of these laws provided that candidates must get a certain percentage of the convention vote to get on the primary ballot or get on the ballot automatically if two or more candidates receive a certain percentage of the vote (30 percent in Colorado, 25 percent in New York and 20 percent in New Mexico). In Utah, only the top two vote-getters in the convention can get on the primary ballot, and any candidate getting 70 percent of the convention vote is automatically nominated. At the present time there are seven states that by law provide for preprimary endorsements by party conventions (New York, Colorado, Connecticut, North Dakota, Utah, Rhode Island and New Mexico). In the absence of legislative action, one or both parties in some states have adopted party rules providing for endorsement by the party. The endorsements made under party rules, like those based on state law, are usually made in conventions open to the public. Normally the candidates endorsed under party rules have no advantage of ballot access or position, but the courts have held that the Massachusetts parties can require candidates to receive a minimum percentage of the convention vote in order to get on the primary ballot. Endorsements are made under party rules by both parties in Massachusetts and Minnesota, and the Delaware Republicans. The California Democrats endorsed for governor in 1990, considered and rejected doing so in 1994 and have not done so since. There are a few other states where party leaders or organizations at the state or local level, usually meeting behind closed doors, sometimes endorse candidates. These include Illinois, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan. In New Jersey,


POLITICAL PARTIES county party committees endorse gubernatorial candidates in an effort to control the entry and success of candidates. The Louisiana Republicans have endorsed for governor but the party is young and has not played a major role in gubernatorial politics. Both parties in Virginia have, from time to time, held conventions instead of primaries, in accordance with state laws, an option which also exists in South Carolina, Alabama and Georgia (Bibby and Holbrook 2004, 84). There are a number of ways in which a political party might benefit from making preprimary endorsements: 1. Political parties have an obvious interest in nominating the strongest possible candidates, the ones who have the best chance of winning in the general election. It is not necessarily true that a plurality of voters who participate in a direct primary will choose the candidate most likely to win in the general election. 2. One important step the party can take in its effort to nominate the strongest possible candidate is to recruit candidates who have the potential for winning. 3. The party has an interest in fostering unity and minimizing the risk of bitter antagonisms that sometimes result from divisive primaries and can result in defeat in November elections. A party endorsement may lead activists and some voters to rally around the endorsee or even lead some unendorsed candidates to drop out of the primary. 4. Party leaders and political activists may believe that it is important to nominate a candidate whose views on issues and whose record of accomplishment in office are in the mainstream of the party. A mainstream candidate should also be more electable than someone holding extreme positions on issues. 5. A political party that plays a role in nominations may be a stronger, more vital institution. If party activists and local organizations have an opportunity to participate in preprimary endorsements, their interest in party organization and its activities may be enhanced. 6. Public officials who have been endorsed by the party before the primary and who win nomination and election may have greater political strength and be more effective in getting their programs passed in the legislature. Table B sets out the relationship between party strength and nominating systems. The states are listed

by party system strength over a 20-year period, 19822002. Party system strength can be estimated from the magnitude of the governor’s vote in the primary. If the average primary vote for each state’s governors over the time period is 80-100 percent, we predict that coalition-building for the nomination is not episodic—that there is a steady corps of party leaders within both parties who outlast individual gubernatorial candidates and can recruit and help each prospective candidate. If the average primary vote is between 60 and 79 percent, both parties may be making modest efforts to aid their candidates. The weakest category, 35–59 percent, indicates that there is no steady corps of party leaders in either party. Factions within the party battle it out in the primary, and there is no effort on the part of the party leaders to influence the nomination contest. The matching of party system strength with strength of pre-primary endorsement provides striking proof that it is only in states that have strong or moderately strong party systems that preprimary endorsements occur. Ten of the 16 states with the strongest parties have preprimary endorsing procedures, and one additional state, Iowa, has a post-primary convention to endorse a candidate if no candidate receives a majority in the primary. Eleven of the 26 states with moderate party strength practice preprimary endorsements. In these 11 states, the party leaders have devised ways to influence the nominations. They may bargain among potential contenders. Bargaining might consist of agreements for appointments within the administration in exchange for support of the leading contender. It might consist of a promise of support in a future endorsement contest. In the last four years, Wisconsin, South Carolina, Alabama and Georgia have been added to the list of parties which endorse by party rule or practice. Thus, there are several reasons why a potential candidate for governor wants the endorsement. The most important is the money and services, such as organizational assistance and personnel, the party provides. In Minnesota the state party organizations provide the endorsee with fund-raising assistance, computer facilities, phone banks, access to lists of voters and campaign workers. In most states, a candidate who wins the endorsement is likely to attract campaign workers and contributions. If all these resources are bestowed on an endorsee, it is likely that he or she will eliminate the other primary candidates. Rivals may be eliminated because they do not receive the required convention vote. Or they may drop out because they believe that a challenge would be The Council of State Governments

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POLITICAL PARTIES

Table B: Gubernatorial Nominations and Party System Strength Party nominations for governor Party system strength (1982–2002)

Strong: preprimary endorsements by law

Moderate: preparty endorsements by party rule or practice

Weak: primary only, no major competitive party endorsements

Strong (n=16)

New York Colorado Connecticut North Dakota

Ohio Delaware (R) Virginia a Michigan (D) Massachusetts Iowa (c) New Jersey

Vermont Indiana (pre-1976) (b) North Carolina Missouri Idaho(1963-1971) (b)

Moderate (n=26)

Utah Rhode Island New Mexico

South Carolina a California (D) (1990) Wisconsin (R) Alabama (a) Illinois Georgia (a) Pennsylvania Minnesota

Tennessee Maine Oregon Arkansas Texas Hawaii Nevada Florida Maryland South Dakota Montana New Hampshire Washington Wyoming Arizona

Weak (n=8)

Kansas Alaska Oklahoma West Virginia Nebraska Mississippi Kentucky Louisiana

Source: Calculated by the authors. Note: Party system strength is measured by averaging the governors’ percent of the primary votes in gubernatorial primaries 1982–2002. In states with strong party systems, the average primary vote received by governors-to-be was 80-100 percent. In moderately strong party systems, it was 60–79 percent. In weak party systems it was 35–59 percent. The five most recent elections were used with the following exceptions: Alaska, Connecticut, Minnesota, and Maine which went back to the 1982 elections and did not use elections in which independents won; and ten elections apiece were used for the states with two-year terms: New Hampshire and Vermont. Rhode Island (7) changed to a four-year term in 1995. Key: (a) State party officials may by law choose either the primary or the convention. (b) Dates in parentheses indicate dates preprimary endorsements were used. (c) There is a postprimary nominating convention if no candidate receives at least 35 percent.

futile in the face of the endorsee’s resources. Endorsees need to eliminate potential primary rivals because their success rate when challenged in a primary has dropped in recent years to 53 percent. Their overall nomination success rate, however, stands at 76 percent. When governors run again and are endorsed (as they usually are), they win renomination over 95 percent of the time, and this figure has not significantly changed over time (Morehouse and Jewell 2003, 136–137). Thus the endorsement is worth working toward.

The Role of Parties in Elections The Role of Party Organizations. One of the most important functions of political parties is to elect their 336

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candidates to political office. Traditionally, the job of the party organization had been to provide the workers who would mobilize the voters, getting them registered, keeping them informed, and getting them to the polls. Before the 1960s there was no technology by which a candidate could create a personal campaign organization. Campaigns were labor intensive, relying little on capital or technology. Now most candidates for statewide, congressional and legislative office organize their own campaigns. They spend much of their time personally raising money. They hire the campaign managers, media experts, pollsters and fund-raisers who can make a successful campaign possible. What role is there for the political party to play in


POLITICAL PARTIES a candidate-centered campaign? Political scientists talk about the service role of the party in campaigns. If the political party succeeds in raising substantial amounts of money, it can provide a number of resources to candidates, such as campaign funds, but equally important, it can provide expertise and technological assistance. In recent years, several Southern state Republican parties have developed sophisticated techniques for targeting legislative races, rather than contesting every district, and this strategy has helped these parties to make major gains. What specific kinds of help from the state party are most valuable to its candidates? Voter registration and get-out-the-vote campaigns as well as provision of workers at polling places are important because they are collective activities that should benefit all of the party’s candidates’ state, district and local level. The party may run advertising, on television, in newspapers, or on billboards, supporting its entire ticket. Often the party can provide candidates with lists of donors who have frequently made financial contributions to the party’s candidates. The state party can conduct polls and share the results with candidates. The party can conduct workshops and training programs on campaign techniques, ranging from how to prepare eye-catching brochures to how to stage events that will generate news coverage from state newspapers and television stations. Electing Governors. In more than half of gubernatorial races there is an incumbent running in the general election. From 1970–2003, 78 percent of eligible gubernatorial incumbents ran for reelection and 75 percent of them succeeded (Beyle, 2004). There are two basic reasons why gubernatorial incumbents usually win. They have the advantage of visibility, records of accomplishment that they can run on, and usually considerable success in raising campaign funds. Voters who identify with a political party are somewhat less likely than in the past to vote consistently for the candidates of their party. Consequently, the reelection of an incumbent governor is becoming more of a personal victory than a partisan one in many states. We can demonstrate this by looking at what happened when there is no incumbent in the race. One – fourth of incumbents lose, but the party in power loses the governorship more than half the time when no incumbent is running, and this proportion of losses has been growing in recent elections. As of 2005, there is a Republican 28 to 22 seat margin in governors’ chairs. The Cost of the Candidate-Centered Campaign. How much does it cost a candidate to run for gover-

nor? The answer depends on a number of factors: the size of the state electorate and the number of media markets in the state, whether candidates must face both primary and general election opposition, how close the elections are and how much money the candidates are able to raise. In 2002, the candidate cost of gubernatorial elections in the 36 states which had them was $839,650,000. This was a 63 percent increase over 1998 (Beyle, 2004). There is a great range in how much these races cost. New York’s race was the all-time most expensive race recorded ($146.8 million) while the race in Wyoming cost $833,181. Both states saw an incumbent win election. If we use the measure of how much was spent by all candidates per election vote, a different picture emerges. In 2002, the New Hampshire governor’s race was the most expensive at $42.77 per voter followed by New York at $31.28 per vote. These increases reflect candidate spending, not party spending, although parties give very generously to candidates in some states. The increases reflect the new style of campaigning for governor with candidates developing their own campaigns. Beyle mentions that there is an increase in the number of candidates who are wealthy or have access to wealth and are willing to spend some of this money to become governor. In 2002, Gov. Gray Davis spent $674.2 million in his successful bid for reelection in California and Gov. George Pataki of New York spent $44.2 million to win his third term. In Texas, Tony Sanchez spent $76.3 million in his unsuccessful bid for governor (Beyle, 2004). Generally speaking, candidates who spend the most money win elections, but this is not necessarily why they win. Many contributors and particularly PACs prefer to give to the candidate they consider most likely to win. A politically strong, experienced candidate, and particularly an incumbent, has the best opportunity to raise money, which enhances his or her already strong chance of winning.

State Parties and Campaign Funding What candidates for governor spend is far from the total amount spent on the campaign. State parties do not abandon their gubernatorial candidates once they are nominated. Most of them are multimillion-dollar organizations with enlarged and more professional staffs and have expanded their activities in the areas of candidate support and party building. More than 80 percent of state parties contribute to gubernatorial, state constitutional, congressional and state legislative candiThe Council of State Governments

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POLITICAL PARTIES dates (Aldrich 2000, 656). In addition to providing candidates with names of appropriate donors and the array of campaign services, including training, issue development, polling, and media consulting, state parties engage in labor-intensive voter mobilization programs and party building activities, including publishing newsletters, recruiting candidates, sharing mailing lists with local units, and joint county-state fund raisers and get-out-the-vote drives. The spectacular gains by Southern Republican candidates for congressional, state and local office in recent years are a product of much stronger Republican organization (Jewell and Morehouse 2001, 99). Party organization matters. With either party now capable of winning gubernatorial elections in each of the 50 states there are powerful incentives for state parties to build and maintain strong organizations. State political parties in recent years have been playing a significant role in the funding of state legislative candidates. Some of this funding comes from the state party organization, some from local parties and some from campaign committees that are organized in most legislatures by the party caucuses. Parties are particularly likely to contribute to legislative candidates who are not incumbents, especially if they are in close races. One recent study of 11 states shows that seven of the 22 parties provide 10–20 percent of the total funds received from legislative candidates and nine others provide at least 5 percent (Gierzynski and Breaux 1996). In recent years, almost half of the states have established programs to provide public funding to political party organizations, individual candidates or both. As of 2000, eight states (Alabama, California, Idaho, Iowa, New Mexico, Ohio, Vermont and Virginia) allocated funds to state and sometimes to local political parties, but not to candidates. Another nine states (Florida, Hawaii, Massachusetts, Maryland, Michigan, Nebraska, New Jersey, Vermont and Wisconsin) allocated funds only to political candidates. Six states (Arizona, Kentucky, Maine, Minnesota, North Carolina and Rhode Island) provided funding to both political parties and candidates. The number of states providing public funding has been changing in recent years because more states, sometimes using the voter initiative, have been adopting public funding programs for candidates (Malbin and Gais 1998, ch. 4). In theory, a program providing public funds for political parties should strengthen the party organizations. The more funding they have, the more functions they can perform, and the more effectively they can serve the needs of their candi338

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dates. How much difference public funding makes depends on the size of that funding and the ability of the party to raise funds from other sources. There has been no comprehensive research on the impact of public funding on state parties. State Parties and National Parties: The Money Relationship. Until the 1970s political scientists referred to the national parties as weak and dependent upon their state affiliates for money. The national committees have been transformed into large-scale and wealthy enterprises which can play a major role in providing services to candidates and to their state partners. This has produced an often uneasy partnership between the national and state party committees. The national committees are often seen as dominating their weaker partners in exchange for the money to function as effective organizations. The Rules: Hard, Soft and State Money. The financial rules that apply to presidential and congressional candidates are not the same as those in effect for state gubernatorial and legislative elections, and likewise, national and state parties face different financial restrictions. Taken together, these rules define three kinds of money for state parties: federal “hard money,” nonfederal “soft money,” and “state money.” The national parties and their affiliates may raise and spend only hard money subject to federal contribution limits and source restrictions. It is the only money that can be used to directly support federal candidates (Malbin ed. 2003, 8–11). It can also be used to fund generic activities which benefit the whole ticket if matched with Levin Amendment funds or state money funds to be described below. Up until the passage of the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002, or BCRA, the national parties could raise and send unlimited amounts of money to their state partners to be used for “party building activities,” or activities which benefited both national and state candidates and included voter registration and identification, campaign material, voter turnout programs and generic party advertising. These funds had to be raised and spent under state rules and via state parties. The size and sources of soft money as it was called were subject only to the laws of the state where it was spent. Beginning in 1980, the national parties became deeply involved in raising and disbursing soft money in cooperation with the state parties. In 1996 and 2000, both national parties spent a significant amount of soft money for the first time on issue advocacy ads. These ads were run in states


POLITICAL PARTIES and congressional districts as candidate-specific broadcast advertising with the obvious purpose of helping the presidential or congressional candidate. The FEC treated these as a form of generic party advertising. BCRA has banned the national parties from raising and sending this type of money to the states for party building activities. The Levin amendment to BCRA permits state parties to raise a form of soft money limited to $10,000 per source if such contributions are allowed under state law. There are 13 states where the law will not permit contributions of this size. Since the 2003–2004 electoral cycle was the first time these new regulations could take effect, their impact is being studied at this very moment. Many state party executive directors speak of money that is raised and spent according to state laws as “state money” and we will use the term to distinguish it from nonfederal soft money. There are 24 states where contributions by individuals and PACs to political parties are limited, and several have stricter limits than the $10,000 per year Levin Amendment soft money provision. Table C shows what these contribution limits were for 2002. In these states the parties have to raise the money to pay for the nonfederal share of administrative and generic activities according to the dictates of state law. In addition, there are 24 states where parties are limited in what they may contribute to gubernatorial candidates. Twelve of the states without contribution limits to parties have limits on party spending for candidates. Since they cannot spend much money on their candidates, this situation offers an unusual opportunity for the national parties to send generous amounts of hard money to those states which, when matched with Levin money, could be used for voter registration and get-out-the-vote activities. This discussion was intended to emphasize the fact that the rules under which each state operates are sovereign with respect to what the party may raise and spend for state candidates. The national committees may not give money to a state party unless it conforms to rules in that state. Likewise, federal rules are sovereign with respect to federal candidates. State parties may not support their congressional candidates with state money unless it is raised according to federal rules. Areas of overlap are the administrative and generic expenses to benefit the whole ticket, which are paid out of both federal and nonfederal (or state) money accounts according to a formula set by the Federal Elections Commission for each election cycle.

State Parties and National Parties: Financial Partners The purpose of the following section is to examine the relationship between the national parties and state parties under the previous era of soft money to better predict their future relationship under BCRA. The financial reports of thirty state parties were examined during three election cycles, the 1996 presidential year, the 1998 midterm (gubernatorial) year, and the 2000 presidential year (Morehouse and Jewell, 2003). The party funds represent the total hard and soft money raised by state party committees, national party committees, and senatorial and congressional committees. In the presidential years of 1996 and 2000, the 30 state parties raised an average of over 60 percent of the hard money total (69 percent in 1996 and 62 percent in 2000). In the 1998 midterm cycle, they raised an average 82 percent of the total raised in hard money funds. Hard money funds from the national parties dropped dramatically from the presidential year of 1996 in which they contributed $47.5 million to state parties to 1998 when the combined total was $31.5 million. Soft money was not as easily raised by the state parties for many reasons, among them state campaign finance regulations which limited fundraising (Table C). National party soft money increased dramatically from 1992 through the 2000 presidential cycle. The Democrats increased their soft money from $64,500 million in 1996 to $149,841 million in 2000, a 132 percent increase, and the Republicans raised their soft money from $50.2 million to $129.9 million, an increase of 159 percent. State parties did not raise soft money as avidly as hard money. For the state parties under study, the average percent contributed by the state parties to the soft money account in 1996 and 2000 was about 37 percent, and in 1998, the average was about 59 percent. Most state party executive directors claimed that they were not dependent upon soft money, even in a presidential year. According to the executive director of the Georgia Republicans: “We are not addicted, but we take what we can get” (Joe King, 1998). Overall it appears that state parties were not the financially dependent partners that many observers predicted. The state parties raised over 60 percent of the hard money and 37 percent of the soft money in presidential election years. When the noise of the presidential election subsided and the midterm cycles began, the parties foraged for an average 82 percent of the hard money and 59 percent of the soft money to keep the office open, pay for utilities, and pay for

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Table C: Contribution Limits to State Parties and From State Parties State parties

Annual individual contributions to state parties

Annual PAC contributions to state parties

Contributions from state parties to candidates for governor

Alabama ........................................ Alaska ............................................ Arizona .......................................... Arkansas ....................................... California ......................................

------------------------------------------------------------ (a) ----------------------------------------------------------------$5,000 $1,000 $100,000 None None 75,610 (in 2000) (e) None None 2,500 25,000 (as of 11/6/02) (c) 25,000 (as of 11/6/02) (c) Unlimited

Colorado ....................................... Connecticut ................................... Delaware ....................................... Florida ........................................... Georgia ..........................................

2,500 5,000 20,000 (b) None None

Hawaii ........................................... Idaho .............................................. Illinois ............................................ Indiana .......................................... Iowa ...............................................

50,000 50,000 50,000 None None 10,000 per primary or general election ------------------------------------------------------------ (a) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) -----------------------------------------------------------------

Kansas ........................................... Kentucky ....................................... Louisiana ...................................... Maine ............................................. Maryland ......................................

15,000 2,500 100,000 (b) None 4,000 (c)

Massachusetts .............................. Michigan ....................................... Minnesota ..................................... Mississippi .................................... Missouri ........................................

5,000 5,000 3,000; in kind unlimited funding (d) None None 68,000 None None 20,000 election yr.; 5,000 nonelection yr. ------------------------------------------------------------ (a) ----------------------------------------------------------------None None 10,000

Montana ........................................ Nebraska ....................................... Nevada ........................................... New Hampshire ............................ New Jersey ....................................

None None None 5,000 37,000

New Mexico .................................. New York ....................................... North Carolina ............................. North Dakota ............................... Ohio ...............................................

------------------------------------------------------------ (a) ----------------------------------------------------------------76,500 (c) 76,500 (c) Primary prohibited; gen. elect. unlimited ------------------------------------------------------------ (a) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ----------------------------------------------------------------16,000 16,000 523,000 per primary or general election

Oklahoma ..................................... Oregon ........................................... Pennsylvania ................................ Rhode Island ................................ South Carolina .............................

5,000 5,000 5,000 ------------------------------------------------------------ (a) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ----------------------------------------------------------------1,000 (limit 10,000) 1,000 (limit 10,000) 25,000; in kind unlimited (d) 3,500 (c) 3,500 (c) 50,000

South Dakota ................................ Tennessee ...................................... Texas .............................................. Utah ............................................... Vermont ........................................

3,000 Unlimited Unlimited ------------------------------------------------------------ (a) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (a) ----------------------------------------------------------------2,000 (b) 2,000 (b) Unlimited

Virginia ......................................... Washington ................................... West Virginia ................................ Wisconsin ...................................... Wyoming .......................................

------------------------------------------------------------ (a) ----------------------------------------------------------------Unlimited 3,200 (c) 0.64 per voter 1,000 1,000 1,000 per primary or general election 10,000 (limit 10,000) 6,000 Unlimited 25,000 (b) (limited 25,000) Unlimited Primary prohibited; gen. elect. unlimited

Source: U.S. Federal Election Commission, 2002. Campaign Finance Law 2002, Contribution and Solicitation Limitations: Chart 2-A and Chart 2-B. www.fec.gov/pubrec/cfl/cfl02chart2a; or 2b. Note: Corporations and labor unions are prohibited from contributing in Alaska, Arizona, Connecticut, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, North Carolina, North Dakota, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Dakota, Wisconsin and Wyoming. Corporations only are prohibited from contributing in: Iowa, Kentucky, Massachusetts, Montana, Oklahoma, Tennessee and West Virginia. Corporations and labor unions are limited the same as PACs in: California, Colorado, Delaware, Hawaii, Louisiana, New Jersey, South Carolina, Vermont and Washington. Labor unions only in Iowa, New York, Oklahoma, Tennessee and West Virginia. In KA and Maryland, corporations and unions are limited the same as individuals. In Kentucky, labor is limited like individuals. In Alabama, Indiana, Massachusetts, Mississippi, New York and Texas, limits on corporate and labor contributing vary. Corporations and unions are unlimited in Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Maine, Missouri, Nebraska and Nevada.

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2,500 5,000 20,000 (b) None None

5,000 2,500 100,000 (b) None 6,000 (c)

None None None Unlimited 37,000

Unlimited Unlimited Limited by office 50,000 for publicly funded 5,000 election yr.; 1,000 nonelection yr.

Unlimited in general election 1,000 per slate Unlimited 5,000 Unlimited

15,000 825,000 for publicly funded (e) 5,000 per primary or general election 1,000; unlimited for public funding 2,600 per primary and general election

Key: (a) There are 14 states that do not limit individual or PAC contributions to, or contributions from, the parties: Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, New Mexico, North Carolina, North Dakota, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Texas, Utah and Virginia. (b) Delaware, Vermont and Wyoming contributions are for a two-year cycle, and in Louisiana and Maryland, contributions are for a four-year period. (c) California, Maryland, New York, South Carolina, Texas and Washington limit monetary contributions for election purposes, but not contributions to overhead expenses, therefore allowing unlimited contributions to the party administrative and housekeeping account. (d) In Massachusetts, and Rhode Island, cash contributions are limited but in-kind contributions are not. Therefore, they are treated as if they permit unlimited party contributions. (e) In Arizona and Nebraska, total is from political party and all political organizations combined.


POLITICAL PARTIES national party issue advertising. Also Table D: on their minds in 36 states is a gubernatorial campaign with an underticket Party Funds from All Sources and Percentage and state legislators to keep or chalRaised from State Party (in thousands) lenge and the need to raise state money to pay for it all. Raised in 1999–2000 Raised in 1997–98 Raised in 1995–96 State Parties and State Money. % from % from % from What portion of the total receipts in a State party Total state party Total state party Total state party presidential election year is state California money to be spent on state activities? Democrat ...... $31,730 73% $35,864 81% $42,674 66% Republican .... 25,386 62 24,300 83 50,790 74 Overall, just about one-half of the toColorado tal funds came from state money in Democrat ...... 7,729 61 1,248 96 2,527 85 the years we studied. For the RepubRepublican .... 6,312 72 1,816 96 4,328 77 Connecticut licans, the percent of the total raised Democrat ...... 3,727 64 4,400 80 3,369 98 for state activities was 51 percent in Republican .... 3,124 97 3,964 85 4,308 92 the presidential cycle of 1996 and 49 Florida Democrat ...... 22,993 74 16,515 95 59,267 63 percent for the presidential cycle of Republican .... 31,920 93 41,697 95 77,995 75 2000. For the Democrats, the correGeorgia sponding percentages were 47 percent Democrat ...... 12,505 84 17,952 96 17,110 87 Republican .... 30,876 90 8,901 90 13,272 82 for 1996 and 53 percent for 2000. Illinois In midterm election years, the perDemocrat ...... 15,593 76 19,231 82 31,677 71 centage of the state share of the total Republican .... 17,222 84 14,706 92 34,291 80 budget is larger, as one might expect Kansas Democrat ...... 2,510 73 1,811 93 2,631 96 given the gubernatorial races. In 1998, Republican .... 1,198 80 1,177 89 2,148 91 the Republican state accounts claimed Minnesota 55 percent of the total state and fedDemocrat ...... 11,560 75 15,483 94 16,530 72 Republican .... 11,585 95 16,647 93 23,603 83 eral accounts and for the Democrats New Jersey the percentage was 63. In summary, Democrat ...... 9,788 94 12,730 98 16,124 96 state party accounts amount to 50 to Republican .... 21,582 97 19,605 97 17,635 94 60 percent of the total state spending, New York Democrat ...... 15,435 98 21,077 66 43,597 58 indicating robust state fundraising. Republican .... 27,141 97 49,467 91 31,358 86 Table D summarizes the state party Oregon finances for the 30 state parties under Democrat ...... 4,293 40 2,988 81 13,770 55 Republican .... 2,100 66 1,874 90 11,187 62 study and the proportion of total funds Pennsylvania from all sources raised by the state Democrat ...... 15,762 60 5,463 86 46,730 57 Republican .... 16,044 79 12,661 97 42,438 68 parties themselves in 1996, 1998 and Ohio 2000. How much of the total funds did Democrat ...... 17,173 67 11,749 81 24,811 56 the state parties raise themselves? The Republican .... 24,405 81 17,273 92 38,678 74 answer is: a very high proportion. In Tennessee Democrat ...... 4,992 48 4,115 89 6,705 49 the presidential years of 1996 and Republican .... 8,583 74 6,267 86 7,865 68 2000, the state parties provided an Texas average 76 percent of the total funds Democrat ...... 11,840 67 12,267 73 14,999 70 Republican .... 9,438 72 10,321 94 12,350 77 raised from all sources. In the guberTotal ................. 768,976 natorial year of 1998, the state contriSources: Federal Election Commission and campaign finance reports filed with secretaries bution of the total funds raised averof state and elections divisions. aged 89 percent. Overall, in 1998, the state parties contributed 82 percent of the hard money, 60 percent of the soft money, and, seriously impacted by the Bipartisan Campaign Reof course, 100 percent of the state money. This pic- form Act of 2002 and its ban on soft money. LaRaja ture is hardly one of state dependency on national (2003, 132–149) however, has found a strong relaparty largesse. tionship between party strength and the amount of In view of this evidence, it is clear that state par- soft money a state party spends, suggesting that a ties have maintained their autonomy and will not be reduction of soft money may decrease the levels of The Council of State Governments

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POLITICAL PARTIES state party activity and weaken them. He further suggests that BCRA will diminish the incentives for levels of party to work together and reduce the efforts of state and local parties on behalf of the entire party ticket. Instead they will focus on the state elections (LaRaja, 2003, 101–120). Of interest is the likely impact of the Levin Amendment which allows soft money to be raised in amounts of up to $10,000. In general, state parties will have to work harder to raise the party-building money and there will be less of it to spend. They will have to raise their own matching hard money, but they have proved they are capable of doing so, having raised well over 60 percent of it in presidential election years and 82 percent in midterm years. The fact that there will be less soft money to spend will mean that state parties may be able to better control their operations. There is disagreement over the percentage of soft money that was actually spent on issue ads, but researchers agree that issue ads have been problematic for both candidates and state parties. Several party executive directors said they were not dependent upon soft money. It is clear that state parties are not decomposing, nor have they become dependent upon the national parties. Instead, they have been adapting to technologically driven politics, providing crucial services and financial resources to candidates. They have maintained their autonomy as they have become more sophisticated and professionalized.

The Role of Parties in Governing The governor is at one time the head of the party and the head of the government. His or her success as a party leader is vital to success in electoral coalition building as well as legislative coalition building (Morehouse 1998, ch.7). Governors of strong party states such as New York are endorsed in conventions and legislative party cohesion is traditionally strong. In some states where the party is weak or divided, governors face legislatures in which sit remnants of the factions that opposed them in primary contests. Thus the ability of governors to get legislative approval for their programs presented in the state of the state address depends on party leadership developed over time by coalition building (Ehrenhalt 1998). Surprisingly, very few political scientists have studied the relationship between the political efforts of party leaders and gubernatorial candidates to capture the nomination and their success when in office in passing the party programs. The recent research by Wright, Osborn and Winburn (2004), draws on a new data set and investigates the degree of policy 342

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representation across the state legislatures and at the same time identifies the importance of parties as intermediary institutions linking mass preferences and the policy behavior of elected representatives. They find that the highest level of representation occurs in strong party chambers. This means that in most cases of strong representation, constituencies are connected to their legislator’s voting by party affiliation. In those systems, more conservative districts elect Republicans and more liberal districts elect Democrats, and strong party voting is the norm in these chambers. The researchers also found that party competition within the legislature has a marked relationship with legislative partisanship. Party voting clearly is stronger in the chambers where the parties approach numerical parity and falls off greatly where one party dominates the chamber. This research provides confirmation of our hypotheses that party competition brings party cohesion which brings policy leadership. The Governor’s Program. The governors of all states go into office with platforms that are the work of the candidates and their parties. A platform reflects enough of the governor’s major priorities that it can be used as a basis for his or her legislative program. Each year the governor presents a state of the state address to a joint gathering of both legislative houses outlining the substance of the program he or she wants passed for the session. The governor’s budget message follows shortly thereafter and other special messages on high priority programs are given throughout the legislative session. Through the power of initiation alone the governor’s influence over the legislature is substantial. The governor sets the agenda for public decision making and largely determines what the business of the legislature will be in any one session. The Governor and the Legislature. The governor works closely with the legislative leaders in his or her party as well as the leaders of the opposition party in the legislature when they are in the majority. When the governor has a majority in the chamber, this party leadership includes the speaker of the house, the presiding officer of the senate, majority leaders and chairs of committees who support the governor’s program and see that bills within it are guided through the legislature. Governors head the ticket on which legislators campaign for election, and legislators hope that the governor’s coattails will help them win. In strong party states, many of those who attend the party nominating convention are state legislators as well as local party leaders who benefit from the governor’s power and have a stake in the governor’s success. If governors have a strong interest in party


POLITICAL PARTIES coalition building, they will involve themselves in legislative elections. When the governor’s statewide party is weak, the legislative party is usually weak as well, and the chief executive must bargain with the leaders of the opposition party to try to get a portion of the program passed. In this case governors make modest demands which do not adequately represent the party’s voters. Governors in over half the states have minority parties in the legislature, and their strategies in these situations are different. In a divided government, the governor lacks many of the advantages that accrue to a governor who is backed by a majority. The leaders are members of the opposition party and are in a position to control the legislative timetable and agenda. The ability of the governor to get his or her program passed under conditions of divided government depends on the strength of the statewide party as well as the cohesion of the legislative party. Opposition leaders will recognize more heed to compromise if the governor is politically strong and has widespread public support. Party Voting on the Governor’s Program. We tested the assertion that the influence of the governor over the legislative party is based on his or her political leadership within the electoral party, the party outside the legislature. Our test was performed on 10 states; five were primary-only states where the parties do not use any endorsement process in gubernatorial primary elections (California, Kansas, Oregon, Tennessee and Texas), and five were endorsing states (Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Minnesota and New York), where the possibility of a strong coalition exists because gubernatorial candidates are endorsed in a convention or party gathering and party cohesion is strong. We tested legislative roll-call voting on the governor’s program bills for each of the 10 states. The strongest finding was that political party is highly correlated with support for the governors’ programs in endorsing states (0.754) and is weakly correlated in primary-only states (0.192). This contrast was caused by the exceedingly high correlation between party and support in Connecticut, Minnesota and New York .These findings strongly confirm the hypotheses that legislators from strong party/endorsing states would be more supportive of the governor than legislators from weak party/primary only states. Support from the governors’ parties is higher in endorsing than in primary-only states. In primary-only states, there is much less partisan loyalty, parties are weaker,

and gubernatorial candidates must build their own electoral and governing organizations (Morehouse and Jewell 2003, 190–192).

Conclusions There have been numerous changes in state political parties in the last 30 years. The most obvious is the increase in the level of two-party competition, particularly in Southern states, where the Republican Party in recent years has been able to elect more governors and has succeeded in winning a much larger share of legislative seats and even, in a few states a legislative majority. We can now say that there are no longer any states where one party holds a monopoly of power. From 1960 through 2002 every state in the union had at least one Democratic governor and one Republican governor. The 1994 election brought about a sharp decline in Democratic control of governorships and legislatures in a number of states, although this is not necessarily the beginning of a trend. The growing party competitiveness in many states can be explained partly by the decline in traditional party loyalties and the willingness of more voters to split their tickets in national and state elections. The character of state party organizations has changed in the last 30 years. Fewer party workers are motivated by the expectation of receiving tangible benefits, and more are driven by a commitment to policy issues and to the candidates who espouse these issues. New campaign technologies have made it possible for candidates to organize their own campaigns and become more independent of party organizations. But these technologies, and particularly television, have made campaigns more expensive. These changes have made party organizations less powerful but have not necessarily made them less useful to candidates. State and local parties have become primarily service organizations, offering candidate assistance in financing and running their campaigns. State party organizations have been able to obtain funds from individuals and interest groups, from national parties and in some states from public financing. This has made it possible for them to maintain larger state offices and staffs and to offer valuable resources to their candidates. In many states the governor maintains control of the state party through the state chair and works to strengthen its effectiveness. One important organizational trend has been the growth of state legislative campaign committees, usually run by legislative leaders, supplementing the campaign efforts of state and local parties. These The Council of State Governments

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POLITICAL PARTIES committees provide financing and services to legislative candidates, particularly to those who are nonincumbents and those in close races. The parties increasingly use sophisticated techniques to target those races, particularly in legislative districts where there is a realistic chance of winning, and thus a good prospect for recruiting candidates. There has also been an increase in the practice of state parties working closely with interest groups and PACs to channel funds toward candidates in targeted districts. One of the greatest challenges facing state parties is to recruit and nominate the strongest possible candidates for statewide and legislative office. The parties’ efforts to affect the nominating process are handicapped by the large number of primaries that are open to all or most voters. Candidates who have little or no experience in, or obligation to, the party can often win nomination if they have the financial resources to run expensive media campaigns. Some political parties continue to make preprimary endorsements, under state law or party rule, in an effort to influence the choice of nominees. This system works best where parties are relatively vigorous and are strongly committed to the endorsement system. One would think that some of the state parties that have been losing elections would at least explore the possibility of experimenting with the endorsement process, which works—however imperfectlyin a number of states. Many state parties’ organizations are becoming stronger, not weaker. They have become service parties to their candidates and began the process of fundraising well before the infusion of money from their national committees. In fact, party development within the state parties paralleled the resurgence of national party organizations. In our sample of 30 state parties, they contributed the bulk of hard, soft and state money raised within their borders in presidential and midterm elections. The governor is the chief policy maker in the American states and his or her ability to provide political leadership affects the quality and distribution of resources. We have examined the governor’s influence over the political party, both outside and within the legislature. The major theme has been that the coalitions formed by the governor to get the party nomination affect his or her ability to see the program through the legislature. A strong governor with an electoral coalition can get support for his or her policies. States are moving to address many of the social problems that exist in our society, such as the growing disparity between the poor and the wealthy, the shrinking middle class, the disconnect between 344

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education skills and job opportunities, and the spector of a bankrupt Medicaid system. The ability of the governor and the party to provide the leadership for these extensive commitments is the key to the continuation of our federal system. Many state political parties are becoming stronger, not weaker. They have adapted to the new technology, and provide valuable services to state and national candidates. Far from the predicted decline, state parties have become parties in service. They provide services such as polling, campaign seminars, advertising and fundraising. State parties maintained their autonomy as they became more professionalized and more durable. At any given time, the working relationship between the national party and a particular state party will depend upon the ability of the two sets of leaders to overcome the differences that arise because the two parties have somewhat different priorities and needs and because some disagreements over financing are inevitable. In the long run the relations between the national and state parties seem certain to become closer.

References Aldrich, John H. 2000. “Southern Parties in State and Nation.” Journal of Politics 62:643–70. Beyle, Thad L. 2004. “Governors: Elections, Campaign Costs, Profiles, Forced Exits and Powers.” In The Book of The States, 36th ed., ed. Keon S. Chi. Lexington, KY: Council of State Governments. Bibby, John F. and Thomas M. Holbrook. 2004. “ Parties and Elections.” In Politics in the American States, 8th ed., eds. Virginia Gray and Russell Hanson. Washington, D.C.:62–99. Downs, Anthony. 1957. An Economic Theory of Democracy. Harper and Row. Ehrenhalt, Alan. 1998. “It Pays to Know Where The Bodies are Buried.” Governing 11(9):5–6. Gierzynski, Anthony, and David A. Breaux. 1996. “Financing State Legislative Elections: The Role of Political Parties.” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Western Political Science Association. Jewell, Malcolm E., and Sarah M. Morehouse.2001. Political Parties and Elections in American States. Washington, D.C.: C.Q. Press. La Raja, Raymond J. 2003. “State Parties and Soft Money: How Much Party Building?” In The State of the Parties. 4th ed. eds. John C. Green and Rick Farmer. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. 2003. “State Political Parties After BCRA.” In Life After Reform. ed. Michael J. Malbin. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. Malbin, Michael J., and Thomas L. Gais. 1998. The Day After Reform. Albany: Rockefeller Institute Press.


POLITICAL PARTIES Morehouse, Sarah M. 1998. The Governor as Party Leader: Campaigning and Governing. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press. Morehouse, Sarah M. and Malcolm E. Jewell. 2003. State Politics, Parties and Policy. Lanham, MD: Rowman and Littlefield. Ranney, Austin. 1976. “Parties in State Politics.” In Politics in the American States, 3rd. ed., eds. Herbert Jacob and Kenneth N. Vines. Boston: Little Brown. Gerald Wright, Tracy Osborn and Jonathan Winburn. 2004. “Parties and Representation in the American Legislatures.” Paper presented at the Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association.

About the Authors Sarah M. Morehouse is professor emerita of Political Science at the University of Connecticut. She is the author of The Governor as Party Leader (1998) and co-author with Malcolm Jewell of Political Parties and Elections in American States (2001) and State Politics, Parties and Policy 2nd ed. (2003). Malcolm E. Jewell is a retired political science professor at the University of Kentucky, where he specialized in state politics and legislatures. In addition to books coauthored with Sarah Morehouse, he is coauthor of two books on Kentucky politics and the Kentucky legislature, and a book on legislative leadership.

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2004 Election Success and State Initiatives By R. Doug Lewis States are in danger of losing federal HAVA funds unless action is taken in 2005. Despite a successful election in 2004, several issues face states to assure voter satisfaction and service. If states fail to act, Congress may do so.

What a difference four years makes. It is amazing how perspective changes when an election is not close. While Election 2000 was not as bad as its characterization, Election 2004 was a dramatic improvement—but nonetheless it demonstrated areas of needed improvements. Those in the elections profession still are concerned about administrative challenges discovered in 2004. With more than 11 million additional voters and dramatic increases in voter registration, due to the efforts of the campaigns and scores of political activist organizations, the administrative process was strained even greater than in Election 2000. Election resources were stretched thin in many places due to the largest turnout of voters in more than 40 years. How did states manage such spectacular increases (e.g., Ky. had a 16 percent increase in voters between the 2000 and 2004 elections; Minn.— 14 percent; Mich. up 13 percent; Ohio—16 percent; Md.—15 percent and an astounding increase for Utah up 20 percent, New Mexico up 26 percent, and Fla. up 27 percent)? One of the reasons the states and the local jurisdictions were able to handle this incredible increase in voters was due directly to the statewide planning process done by states to comply with the federal Help America Vote Act (HAVA). Attention to problems found (in 2000 and before) were identified and addressed by state and local election officials. Developing discussions throughout each state, local jurisdictions were able to get the political support from local leaders to make improvements to their own processes without any significant influx of federal or state funds because monies from HAVA had not been distributed in time to have major impact in 2004. The stress of “getting it right” with the national awareness and four years of constant criticism of the process contributed to heightened attention to details for all concerned. However, there are things we probably can and should do better, with changes by legislators.

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Federal Issues Loom Immediately: Failure to Act can be Expensive Some feel the decisions ought to begin with Congress, but most of the nation’s elections administrators believe the real solutions to the challenges are more likely to be the responsibility of individual states—if there are to be effective solutions. First, there is the need of the states to meet requirements of HAVA. At this writing, seven states had not yet completed the details necessary to receive their FY 2003 funds: Alaska, Hawaii, Ill., N.Y., Okla., S.D. and Utah, while most states are preparing to receive their FY 2004 funds. Most are in process and should be done by the time this article appears, but South Dakota and New York have larger hurdles to conquer. South Dakota needs its legislature to provide the 5 percent matching funds to qualify for federal HAVA funds. New York is mired in conflict within its own legislature about major portions of necessary legislation to make its state compliant with HAVA. The risk for these states is they are playing Russian roulette with the U.S. Congress, which is now indicating that any undistributed funds available at appropriation time in the fall of 2005 are likely to be taken back by Congress. States not fully funded and in compliance by about July 2005 are likely to lose federal matching funds and still be responsible for compliance with state funds. That includes about 20 states who have not yet complied to qualify for FY 2004 funds. Some states have enough money to partially qualify for matching funds for FY 2004, but if they do not fully qualify quickly, there is a very real possibility the federal government will force them to repay all the distributed funds . . . and still comply with state funds. The seriousness of this amounts to millions of dollars each for many states; N.Y. alone is risking a $156 million loss of federal funds and then a necessity of producing a like amount from the state to meet its compliance requirements rather than simply a 5 percent match that gets them the $156 million.


ELECTIONS

Election 2004 Issues: States Must Address Action Quickly Let’s review concerns expressed by political groups and media about Election 2004. Editorial limitations prevent a discussion of all concerns policy makers have heard. Rather this article focuses on those appearing to have greatest needs for decisions. Voting Equipment and Standard—The great debate that raged on the effectiveness and security of voting equipment, and especially electronic equipment, appears to have been somewhat overblown in predictions of rampant fraud or ultimate and dire massive failures. Neither happened. While there were some examples of voting equipment foul-ups, so far the problems seem to be more of human failures rather than machine failures; i.e., if humans had done what they were supposed to have done, the equipment would have rendered votes accurately. It is important to remember that those criticizing voting equipment often ignore the imperfection of paper ballots. There are imperfections in all voting processes and almost always because humans—voters, or poll workers, or technicians or election officials— make mistakes. The presumption that paper ballots are perfect, and that voting equipment is mistake prone, is an erroneous judgment. As this is being written, it appears states must proceed with purchasing voting equipment without the benefit of having national standards for disability compliance or for security standards. HAVA requires states to purchase at least one voting device per polling site that allows persons with disabilities, especially the blind and visually impaired, to vote independently and privately. To meet the 2006 deadline in HAVA, states will need to proceed with a full court press in 2005 to identify and purchase systems. Those who wait until the deadline looms stand to have delivery problems, training problems and potential election disasters in 2006 because units are too new to both election officials and voters. State leaders are urging congressional leaders to revamp deadline dates for HAVA compliance, but there is a genuine reluctance by some members of both political parties to reopen the HAVA legislation. Since no one can accurately predict what will happen to the legislation if it is opened, it appears unlikely as of this writing that there is sufficient political will to reopen the legislation and change deadlines. That leaves states faced with immediate action at the state level. It appears that standards from the federal government (the Election Assistance Commission and the National Institute of Standards and Technology) will

come too late to meet the HAVA deadlines. Even if they complete standards by mid year 2005, the lag time for vendors to design and produce units to meet new standards are likely to take an additional year beyond the final published standards. Additionally, government purchasing processes take long lead times. Long lines at the polls seem to be one of the major concerns in 2004, and yet the choices available to fix the problem are rarely heeded. The principal solution for this is a recognition that the longer the ballot is in a presidential election year, the longer it takes voters to vote. Keeping initiatives, referendum, and state Constitutional amendments to a minimum in a presidential election year is certainly one key solution but one that is rarely acceptable to policy-makers. The second part of the problem is recognition that more voting equipment is needed for the increased numbers of voters that appear in a presidential year. Most states and local jurisdictions do not provide sufficient quantities of voting equipment needed for an off-presidential year election, let alone one where more voters show up than have appeared in any election in 40 years. This becomes a matter of the “public will” to do what is necessary: buy enough voting equipment to provide enough machines for the voters who showed up in Election 2004 and elections professionals can probably whip this issue for the foreseeable future. That means buying not just enough equipment for the voters, but enough spares to replace the units that malfunction during the election. Blaming election officials for long lines is not going to fix this problem without initially solving the first two problems: limiting the ballot size and buying enough voting machines to do the job. Election officials cannot run to the nearest electronics store and buy extra voting machines on the spur of the moment. Despite the election administrators request for more equipment, that decision is usually made at least one to two years in advance and it is a decision made by budget and political authorities who are not election officials.

Immediate Policy Concerns of the States What are systemic problems that face policy-makers immediately? The following must receive attention of each and every state: Voter Registration Issues Voter Registration Deadlines: States that have less than a 30-day cutoff for voter registration imperil The Council of State Governments

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ELECTIONS the ability of the election official to assure the voter is on the roll and not disenfranchised. Well intentioned legislators who have provided for shorter cutoff periods trying to enfranchise more voters have actually forced the unintended consequence of almost assuring that the records are not accurate. Two, and probably only two solutions, are available in this regard: establish 30-day cutoff of registration, or have same day registration (which creates additional administrative problems and may prove difficult in states with huge population centers or where a history of voter fraud has occurred). Clearly too short a period works to the disadvantage and possible disenfranchisement of voters and to the integrity of the process. Voter Registration Groups: The importance of groups dedicated to voter registration efforts is certainly welcome within our democracy. Their efforts reward the process with more Americans eligible to participate. However, Election 2004 proved conclusively there is a major problem where some voter groups, special interest groups and candidate organizations engage in voter registration drives and then burden the process because of innocent or intentional manipulation of the process. States need to quickly address legal changes for necessary training of “deputy or outside registrars” and must set deadlines for turning in the registrations immediately upon soliciting them from voters. Allegations of (1) “bogus registrations” or (2) where voter groups accept registrations but then only turn in the ones they think are for their candidates, must not be allowed to damage the fundamental faith of voters in the process. States need to force all organizations to receive official training by election officials. Concurrently, give election administrators the ability to stop efforts of groups or individuals who can’t seem to follow law and procedures. Voter registration (VR) applications need to be turned in within 48 hours of being completed by the voter. This process must be fair to both the voter and the official election administration. If the VR groups are allowed to sit on applications for weeks or months at a time, voters can not check to see if the organization actually turned it in. They burden the process by turning in applications on the last day or two before registration cutoff. There has to be accountability built into the VR process. A valid name, address and phone number or some form of identification of the solicitor of the VR application is necessary to improving this process. Continual process abusers need to be prohibited from engaging in VR drives. Thousands of voters thought they had registered 348

The Book of the States 2005

through one of these groups only to discover that their applications never arrived or arrived too late to get on the official rolls. What is the difference? The difference is whether the voter votes an actual ballot or a provisional ballot that may not be qualified in a later decision. That is a significant difference. States need to provide for effective enforcement perhaps by giving the chief election official of each state the ability to use internal legal staff to prosecute. Absentee and Early Voting Issues Policy-makers must allow enough time to end early voting with sufficient time for local election officials to produce official poll books to be distributed to polling sites showing voters who voted early. There can be disagreement on how much time is necessary, but most election officials would recommend no less than four full days prior to election day. The process of identifying early voters on rolls is paramount to correctly serving voters as well as preventing double voting. Absentee ballot applications, likewise, need to have a prior cutoff date so the elections office can receive the application and have ability to return the ballot by mail to the absentee voter. A cutoff date is likely to require at least seven days prior to election. Allowing voters to request absentee ballots up to the day before election almost guarantees that large numbers in urban areas will be ill served: because they have requested an absentee ballot the election official almost always has to deny the opportunity to vote in person to avoid duplicate voting. That is not fair to the voter or the election process. Absentee ballots tend to be paper based and the trend is growing for states to lessen the restrictions on why a voter can vote by absentee ballot. California allows any voter to register as a permanent absentee voter; Texas allows voters 65 and older to register as absentee voters. All states need to consider allowing election officials to open and process absentee ballots prior to election day. Examples of states allowing officials to open the ballots prior to election are: Ark., Calif., Iowa, Idaho, Kan., Mass., Mo., Ohio, Tenn., Texas and Utah. Among the states allowing them to count the ballots (but not reveal results) prior to election day: Calif., Fla., Kan., Mo. and Texas. Provisional Voting Policy-makers need to address the short term issues in provisional voting. Long term, the numbers of provisional voters is likely to decrease to a much smaller, more manageable number because statewide


ELECTIONS voter databases will do a better job of keeping up address changes and eliminate need for voters to request a provisional ballot. Michigan, even in 2004, with extraordinary numbers of voters going to the polls, found their provisional ballots were an exceedingly small part of their election because of effective use of the statewide voter database. But until statewide databases are created, debugged and functional, there is an interim problem. Multiple lawsuits were filed in a variety of states to force states to count the provisional ballot regardless of whether the voter was in the right polling site. So far, all final adjudications of this have indicated state law prevails as called for in HAVA. But those suits did not settle the issue of what races should be counted whenever a provisional ballot is cast. Most states have indicated the voter must go to the proper polling site to have any of the voter’s votes counted. Some states (e.g., N.Y., Wash., Calif.) allow the voter to have votes counted for any wide jurisdictional race such as presidential and other federal races, statewide races, and countywide races, regardless of whether the voter is in the correct polling site. States need to decide, on a state-by-state basis, what is appropriate and fair to the voter. Additionally, states need to review policies on how long election administrators have to qualify provisional ballots. If the spirit of offering provisional ballots is to assure that voters have some method of fail safe when they are inadvertently left off the official rolls, then states need to determine if the spirit

of the law can be met by providing less than two weeks to check and qualify those ballots. Poll watchers—A Continuing Source of Problems It is time for states to revisit the whole concept of poll watchers—distinct from the concerns about official poll workers. Voters often confuse the actions of poll watchers as being an election official who is challenging them. Legislators need to review and define when and how election officials can regulate the poll watcher process. These are not the only concerns but are the major policy issues for states immediately and failure to act this year may lead to congressional action instead. The nation’s elections administrators meet during the first quarter of 2005 to draw up recommendations for states and Congress about the best solutions for the most vexing of systemic problems. The Election Center’s National Task Force on Election Reform 2004 will publish their findings to help policy-makers at all levels find appropriate solutions.

About the Author R. Doug Lewis, CERA (Certified Election/Registration Administrator), is executive director of The Election Center, a nonpartisan, nonprofit organization representing the nation’s election officials. He has been called upon by Congress, the federal agencies, state legislatures, and national and worldwide news media for solutions to voting issues.

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350

The Book of the States 2005 ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... G ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

Hawaii .................................... Idaho ....................................... Illinois ..................................... Indiana ................................... Iowa ........................................

Kansas .................................... Kentucky ................................ Louisiana ............................... Maine (k) ................................ Maryland ...............................

Massachusetts ....................... Michigan ................................ Minnesota .............................. Mississippi ............................. Missouri .................................

Montana ................................. Nebraska ................................ Nevada .................................... New Hampshire ..................... New Jersey .............................

New Mexico ........................... New York ................................ North Carolina ...................... North Dakota ........................ Ohio ........................................

Oklahoma .............................. Oregon .................................... Pennsylvania ......................... Rhode Island ......................... South Carolina ......................

See footnotes at end of table.

... ... ... ... ...

Colorado ................................ Connecticut ............................ Delaware ................................ Florida .................................... Georgia ...................................

2005 ... ... ... ... ...

Alabama ................................. Alaska (a) ............................... Arizona ................................... Arkansas ................................ California ...............................

State or other jurisdiction

G,LG,AG,A,SP,T,(r) G,SP G,LG G,LG,AG,SS,T G,LG,AG,AR,C,SS,SP,T,(s)

G,LG,AG,A,SS,T,(o) G,LG,AG,C ... SS,AG,AR,(q),(n) G,LG,A,AG,SS,T

... G,LG,AG,A,SS,T G,LG,AG,SS,T,(h) G ...

G,LG,AG,A,SS,T G,LG,AG,SS (l) G,LG,AG,A,SS ... A

G,LG,AG,SS,T,(i) ... (j) G G,LG,AG,C

G,LG G,LG,AG,SS,SP,T,(h) G,LG,AG,C,SS,T A,SS,T G,LG,AG,AR,A,SS,T

G,LG,AG,SS,T G,LG,AG,C,SS,T AG,A,T G,LG,AG,AR,CFO G,LG,AG,AR,SS,SP (e)(f)

G,LG,AG,AR,A,SS,T G,LG G,AG,SS,SP,T,(b) G,LG,AG,A,SS,T,(g) G,LG,AG,SS,SP,T (c)(h)

2006

Table 6.1 STATE EXECUTIVE BRANCH OFFICIALS TO BE ELECTED: 2005–2009 2007

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... G,LG,AG,AR,A,SS,T (m) ...

... G,LG,AG,AR,A,SS,T G,LG,AG,AR,SS,T (j) ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

2008

... AG,SS,T AG,A,T ... ...

... ... G,LG,AG,AR,A,SS,SP,T, (p) G,LG,A,T,(q) ...

G,LG,AG,A,SS,SP ... ... G ...

... (l) ... ... G,LG,AG,SS,T

... ... (j) ... ...

... ... ... G, LG, AG, SP ...

... ... G, LG, (d) ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... G

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

2009

ELECTIONS


2006

37 31 30 7 15 1 6 26 8 24

... G,LG

... ... ... G,LG,AG,SS,T G,A,SS,SP,T

G,LG,AG,A,SS,T,(t) G G,LG,AG,AR,C,(u) ... G,LG,AG,A,SS,T

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2004 and state election administration offices and web sites, January 2005. Note: This table shows the executive branch officials up for election in a given year. Footnotes indicate other offices (e.g., commissioners of labor, insurance, public service, etc.) also up for election in a given year. The data contained in this table reflect information available at press time. Key: . . .—No regularly scheduled elections G —Governor LG—Lieutenant Governor AG—Attorney General AR—Agriculture A—Auditor C—Comptroller CFO—Chief Financial Officer SS —Secretary of State SP—Superintendent of public instruction (v) T —Treasurer (a) Election of school boards established to maintain system of state dependent public school systems established in areas of the unorganized borough and military reservations not served by other public school systems. (b) Corporation commissioners (5)–6 year terms, 2004–4 (one due to resignation), 2006–2. (c) Insurance commissioner and Board of Equalization. (d) Insurance Commissioner. (e) Public service commissioners (5)–6 year terms, 2004–1, 2006–2, 2008–2. Commissioner of labor–4 year term, 2006. (f) Insurance commissioner, commissioner of public lands. (g) Land commissioner. (h) Controller.(i) Commissioner of insurance–2006; Board of education members (10)–4 year terms, 2004–5, 2006–5, 2008–5. (j) Commissioner of elections–4 year term, 2007; commissioner of insurance–4 year term, 2007; board of elementary and secondary education (8)–4 year terms, 2007–4; public service commissioners (5)–6 year terms, 2004–2, 2006–1, 2008–2.

Governor ........................... Lieutenant Governor ....... Attorney General ............. Agriculture ........................ Auditor .............................. Chief Financial Officer ... Comptroller ...................... Secretary of State ............. Supt. of Public Inst. (v) ... Treasurer ........................... 2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

... ...

American Samoa ................... U.S. Virgin Islands ................

Totals for year

G,LG,AG ... ... SP ...

Virginia .................................. Washington ............................ West Virginia ......................... Wisconsin ............................... Wyoming ................................

2005 ... ... ... ... ...

South Dakota ......................... Tennessee ............................... Texas ....................................... Utah ........................................ Vermont .................................

State or other jurisdiction

STATE EXECUTIVE BRANCH OFFICIALS TO BE ELECTED: 2005–2009—Continued

2007 2008

12 10 10 2 8 0 0 7 4 9

G, LG ...

... G,LG,AG,A,SS,SP,T (f) G,AG,AR,A,SS,T ... ...

(t) ... (u) G,LG,AG,A,T G,LG,AG,A,SS,T

2009

2 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0

... ...

G,LG,AG ... ... SP ...

... ... ... ... ...

(k) In Maine the legislature elects constitutional officers (AG,SS,T) in even-numbered years for 2 year terms; the auditor will be elected by the legislature in 2004 and will serve a 4 year term. (l) Michigan State University trustees (8)–8 year terms, 2004–2, 2006–2, 2008–2, 2010–2; University of Michigan regents (8)–8 year terms, 2004–2, 2006–2, 2008–2; Wayne State University governors (8)–8 year terms, 2004–2, 2006–2, 2008–2; State Board of Education (8)–8 year terms, 2004–2, 2006–2, 2008–2. (m) Commissioner of insurance, transportation commissioners (3), public service commissioners (3). (n) Tax Commissioner. (o) Commissioner of public lands–4 year term, 2006; board of education (10)–6 year terms, 2004–5, 2008–5; corporation commissioners (3)–6 year terms, 2004. (p) Commissioner of labor; commissioner of insurance. (q) Public Service Commissioner (3)–6 year terms, 2004–1, 2006–1, 2008–1. (r) Corporation commissioner (3)–6 year terms; commissioner of insurance–4 year term; commissioner of labor–4 year term. (s) Adjutant general–4 year term. (t) Commissioner of school and public lands, 2006; public utility commissioners (3)–6 year terms, 2004– 1, 2006–1, 2008–1. (u) Commissioner of general land office–4 year term, 2006; railroad commissioners (3)–6 year terms, 2004–1, 2006–1, 2008–1; board of education (15)–4 year terms, 2004–8, 2006–7, 2008–8, 2010–7. (v) Superintendent of public instruction or commissioner of education. (w) All of the positions will appear next on the ballot in 2004. However, the positions of secretary of state, attorney general, commissioner of agriculture and tax commissioner will only be elected to terms of two years. They will again appear on the ballot in 2006 and be elected to terms of four years and every four years thereafter. This one time ballot change is to establish a new four-year cycle as approved by the voters of North Dakota in June 2000. The remaining positions will appear on the ballot in the same four-year cycle as the governor and president of the United States.

3 3 3 3 2 0 0 3 0 3

... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

ELECTIONS

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352

The Book of the States 2004

35 36 21 40 56

25 35 59 (a) 50 50

40 38 39 35 47

40 38 67 52 34

50 49 21 24 40

42 62 50 47 33

48 30 50 38 46

Colorado .............................. Connecticut .......................... Delaware .............................. Florida .................................. Georgia .................................

Hawaii .................................. Idaho ..................................... Illinois ................................... Indiana ................................. Iowa ......................................

Kansas .................................. Kentucky .............................. Louisiana ............................. Maine .................................... Maryland .............................

Massachusetts ..................... Michigan .............................. Minnesota ............................ Mississippi ........................... Missouri ...............................

Montana ............................... Nebraska .............................. Nevada .................................. New Hampshire ................... New Jersey ...........................

New Mexico ......................... New York .............................. North Carolina .................... North Dakota ...................... Ohio ......................................

Oklahoma ............................ Oregon .................................. Pennsylvania ....................... Rhode Island ....................... South Carolina ....................

See footnotes at end of table.

35 20 30 35 40

101 60 203 75 124

70 150 120 94 99

100 U 42 400 80

160 110 134 122 163

125 100 105 151 141

51 70 118 100 100

65 151 41 120 180

105 40 60 100 80

House/Assembly

Total legislators

Senate

Alabama ............................... Alaska ................................... Arizona ................................. Arkansas .............................. California .............................

State or other jurisdiction

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Senate

Table 6.2 STATE LEGISLATURES: MEMBERS TO BE ELECTED, 2005–2009 2005

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... 80

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

House

2006

24 15 25 38 ...

... 62 50 24 17

25 24 11 24 ...

40 38 67 ... 17

... 19 ... 35 47

13 35 (b) 25 25 (d)

17 36 ... 20 56

35 ... 30 17 20

Senate

101 60 203 75 124

70 150 120 48 99

100 U 42 400 ...

160 110 134 ... 163

125 100 ... 151 141

51 70 118 100 100

65 151 ... 120 180

105 40 60 100 80

House

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... 40

... ... ... 52 ...

... ... 39 ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Senate

2007

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... 80

... ... ... 122 ...

... ... 105 ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

House

2008

24 15 25 38 46

42 62 50 23 16

25 25 10 24 ...

40 ... ... ... 17

40 19 ... 35 ...

12 35 (b) 25 25 (c)

18 36 11 20 56

... 10 30 18 20

Senate

101 60 203 75 124

70 150 120 46 99

100 U 42 400 ...

160 110 134 ... 163

125 100 ... 151 ...

51 70 118 100 100

65 151 41 120 180

... 40 60 100 80

House

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Senate

2009

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... 80

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

House

ELECTIONS


40 49 34 33 30

18 15

2,004

Virginia ................................ Washington .......................... West Virginia ....................... Wisconsin ............................. Wyoming ..............................

American Samoa ................. U.S. Virgin Islands ..............

Totals .................................... 5,431

20 U

100 98 100 99 60

70 99 150 75 150

0

... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Senate

2005

180

... ...

100 ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

House

1,144

(e) 15

... 24 17 17 15

35 17 16 15 30

Senate

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2004 and state election web sites, January 2005. Note: This table shows the number of legislative seats up for election in a given year. As a result of redistricting, states may adjust some elections. The data contained inthis table reflect information available at press time. See the Chapter 3 table entitled, “The Legislators: Numbers, Terms, and Party Affiliations,” for specific information on legislative terms. Key: . . .—No regularly scheduled elections U—Unicameral legislature (a) The entire Senate is up for election every 10 years, beginning in 1972. Senate districts are divided into three groups. One group of senators is elected for terms of four years, four years and two years;two years, four years and four years; four years, two years and four years. b) After redistricting there will be a lottery for which districts in the Senate will receive the set of terms. (c) Even-numbered Senate districts. (d) Odd-numbered Senate districts. (e) In American Samoa, Senators are not elected by popular vote. They are selected by county councils of chiefs.

35 33 31 29 30

House/Assembly

Total legislators

Senate

South Dakota ....................... Tennessee ............................. Texas ..................................... Utah ...................................... Vermont ...............................

State or other jurisdiction

Table 6.2 STATE LEGISLATURES: MEMBERS TO BE ELECTED, 2005–2009 2006

4,978

20 U

... 98 100 99 60

70 99 150 75 150

House

171

... ...

40 ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Senate

2007

407

... ...

100 ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

House

1,089

(e) 15

... 25 17 16 15

35 16 15 14 30

Senate

20 U

... 98 100 99 60

70 99 150 75 150

House

4,730

2008

0

... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Senate

2009

180

... ...

100 ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

House

ELECTIONS

The Council of State Governments

353


ELECTIONS

Table 6.3 METHODS OF NOMINATING CANDIDATES FOR STATE OFFICES State or other jurisdiction Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................ Colorado .............................

Connecticut .........................

Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................ Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................ Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri .............................. Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey .......................... New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio ..................................... Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Method(s) of nominating candidates Primary election; however, the state executive committee or other governing body of any political party may choose instead to hold a state convention for the purpose of nominating candidates. Primary election. Petition. Primary election. Primary election or independent nomination procedure. Assembly/primary. Political parties hold state assemblies to nominate candidates for the primary ballot. A candidate is placed on the ballot if he/she receives 30 percent of the vote or, after two ballots, is one of the two candidates receiving the highest number of votes. Candidates (including those from major political parties) can also petition their name on the ballot. Each party’s gubernatorial candidate selects a lieutenant governor candidate after the primary election. Convention/primary election. Major political parties hold state conventions (convening not earlier than the 68th day and closing not later than the 50th day before the date of the primary) for the purpose of endorsing candidates. If no one challenges the endorsed candidate, no primary election is held. However, if anyone (who received at least 15 percent of the delegate vote on any roll call at the convention) challenges the endorsed candidate, a primary election is held to determine the party nominee for the general election. Primary election for Democrats and Primary election and Convention for Republicans.. Primary election. Primary election/convention. Primary election. Primary election. New parties nominate candidates for general election after qualifying for ballot status. Primary election. Primary election held for the nomination of candidates for governor and U.S. senator; state party conventions held for the nomination of candidates for other state offices. Primary election; however, if there are more than two candidates for any nomination and none receives at least 35 percent of the primary vote, the primary is deemed inconclusive and the nomination is made by the party convention. (Applicable only for recognized political parties.) Primary election. Minor party candidates are nominated at their respective state conventions Independent candidates are nominated by petition. Primary election. A slate of candidates for governor and lieutenant governor that receives the highest number of its party’s votes but which number is less than 40 percent of the votes cast for all slates of candidates of that party, shall be required to participate in a runoff primary with the slate of candidates of the same party receiving the second highest number of votes. Primary election. Primary election. Primary election. Petition only for unaffiliated or non-recognized parties in general elections only. Primary election. Primary election held for governor, state senate and state house. State convention held to nominate candidates for lieutenant governor, secretary of state and attorney general. Primary election. Candidates for minor parties or independent candidates are by petition. They must have the signatures of 2,000 people who will be eligible to vote in the next general election. Primary election. Primary election. Primary election. Primary election. Primary election. Independent candidates are nominated by petition for the general election. Minor parties nominated by petition or by party. Primary election. Primary election. Independent candidates are nominated by petition for the general election. Statewide candidates petition to go to convention and are nominated in a primary election. District and legislative candidate petition for primary ballot access. Primary election/petition. Primary election. New parties by convention. Convention/primary election. Political parties hold state conventions for the purpose of endorsing candidates. Endorsed candidates are automatically placed on the primary election ballot, but other candidates may also petition their name on the ballot. Primary election. Primary election. Primary election, convention and petition. Primary election, and nomination papers for minor political parties and political bodies. Primary election. Primary election for Republicans and Democrats; party conventions held for five minor parties. Candidates can have name on ballot via petition.

See footnotes at end of table.

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ELECTIONS

METHODS OF NOMINATING CANDIDATES FOR STATE OFFICES — Continued State or other jurisdiction South Dakota ......................

Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah .....................................

Vermont .............................. Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................. Wyoming .............................. Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ U.S. Virgin Islands .............

Method(s) of nominating candidates Primary election. Any candidate who receives a plurality of the primary vote becomes the nominee; however, if no individual receives at least 35 percent of the vote for the candidacy for the offices of governor, U.S. senator, or U.S. congressman, a runoff election is held two weeks later. Lt. governor, attorney general, secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, school and public lands commissioner, and public utilities commissioner are nominated by party convention. Primary election/petition. Primary election/convention. Minor parties without ballot access nominate candidates for the general election after qualifying for ballot access by petition. Convention, primary election and petition. Parties generally nominate their candidates in a convention. If one candidate does not get a certain percentage of delegate votes, the top two candidates go to a primary. Candidates not affiliated with a party can gain ballot access by petition. Primary election. Major parties that fail to nominate by primary election and minor parties can nominate by filing of a statement to nomination by the state party committee. Independents can be nominated by petition. Primary election. Primary election; minor parties hold convention for nomination and qualify at primary election. Primary election for major parties. Convention is held for official parties that received less than 10 percent of the last gubernatorial vote total. Minor parties and independent candidates nominated by petition. Primary election/petition. Primary election. Primary election. Independent and minor party candidates file by nominating petition. Individual files petition for candidacy with the chief election officer. Petition must be signed by statutorily-mandated number of qualified voters. Primary election.

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey of state election administration offices, October 2004 and state election websites, January 2005. Note: The nominating methods described here are for state offices; procedures may vary for local candidates. Also, independent candidates may have to petition for nomination. ..

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356

The Book of the States 2005

Aug. 2nd T Mar. 4, 2008

(l) Feb. 2008

Mar., 2nd T Mar. 14, 2008

July, 3rd T July 15, 2008

May, 4th T May 27, 2008

Mar., 3rd T Mar. 18, 2008

May, ★ May 6, 2008

(k) ... Date not set at press time.

(l) (m) ... Date not set at press time.

May, 1st T after 4th M May 28, 2008

(l) Mar. 9, 2008

Arkansas .......................

California ......................

Colorado .......................

Connecticut ...................

Delaware .......................

Florida ...........................

Georgia ..........................

Hawaii ...........................

Idaho ..............................

Illinois ............................

Indiana ..........................

Iowa ...............................

Kansas ...........................

Kentucky .......................

Louisiana (f) .................

See footnotes at end of table.

(l) June. 3, 2008

(l) (m) ... Date not set at press time.

...

3 wks. Prior to Runoff May 20, 2008

(l) (m) ... Date not set at press time.

...

Feb., 4th T Feb. 26, 2008

Arizona ..........................

...

...

...

21 days AP Aug. 5, 2008

...

...

...

...

June, 2nd T June 10, 2008

...

...

Aug., 4th T Aug. 26, 2008

Alaska ............................

...

Runoff

June, 1st T June 3, 2008

Primary

National (a)

Alabama ........................

State or other jurisdiction

Nat. July 19, 2006

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

Aug. 1st T (d)

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

(l) (p) Oct. 20, 2007

Nat.

June, ★

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Sept., 2nd Last S

9th T Prior

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Sept., 1st S After 1st M

Aug. 2nd T

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Aug., 2nd T

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

General

Nat. June 19, 2008

Nat. (d)

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat. June 6, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Nat.

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

(l) (p) (p) Date not set at press time.

35 days after P May 15, 2008

... Aug. 1, 2006

... June 6, 2006

... May 2, 2006

... March 14, 2006

... May 23, 2006

... Sept. 23, 2006

Nat. Aug. 8, 2006

... Sept. 5, 2006

... Sept. 6, 2008

... Aug.2006

... Aug. 8, 2006

... Mar. 7, 2008

Mar. ★

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

...

... Aug. 22, 2006

June, Last T June 27, 2006

Runoff

Nat. May 16, 2006

8th T Prior Sept. 19, 2008

Nat.

June, 1st T June 6, 2006

Primary

State (b)

Nat.

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

General

Table 6.4 ELECTION DATES FOR NATIONAL, STATE AND LOCAL ELECTIONS (Formulas and dates of state elections)

Primary Runoff

...

...

Nat.

May 3rd T

...

V

V Nov. 17, 2007

Nat. Nov. 6, 2007

5 wks. Prior Nov. 7, 2006

State Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 4, 2008

... Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

State Nov. 7, 2006

Nat.

State Nov. 7, 2006

... Nov. 4, 2008

...

...

...

...

...

...

...

...

Nat.

...

...

56th day preceding elect.. . . Nov. 7, 2006

V Nov. 7, 2006

... Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Mar., 2nd T

... Nov. 7, 2006

V

Local General

V

Nat.

April 1st T

Nat.

Nat.

...

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

(d)

Nat. or May, 1st M (c)

V

Nat.

Nat.

8 T prior to Nat. or Nat.

V

V

ELECTIONS


The Council of State Governments

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

(l) (m) ... Date not set at press time.

... ...

... ...

... 4 wks. AP June 3, 2008

Feb., 4th T Feb. 26, 2008

June, 1st T (g) June 3, 2008

Feb., ★ Feb. 5, 2008

June, ★ June 3, 2008

May, 1st T After 2nd M May 13, 2008

Sept., 1st T Sept. 2, 2008

Sept., 2nd T Sept. 9, 2008

June, ★ June 3, 2008

June, 1st T June 3, 2008

Mar., 1st T Mar. 4, 2008

May, ★ May 6, 2008

(n) ... Date not set at press time.

Mar.,★ Mar. 4, 2008

July, last T (h)

Michigan .......................

Minnesota .....................

Mississippi ....................

Missouri ........................

Montana ........................

Nebraska .......................

Nevada ...........................

New Hampshire ............

New Jersey ....................

New Mexico ..................

New York .......................

North Carolina .............

North Dakota ...............

Ohio ...............................

Oklahoma .....................

See footnotes at end of table.

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

(l) ... Date not set at press time.

...

...

...

...

...

...

Nat. Nat.

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

June, 2nd T

Nat.

Sept.,★

Nat.

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

June, ★

Nat.

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008 Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Aug., 4th T July 25, 2006

... Mar. 7, 2006

... June 10, 2008

4 wks. AP May 6, 2008

... Sept. 5, 2006

... June 6, 2006

... June 7, 2005

... Sept. 12, 2006

... Sept. 5, 2006

... May 9, 2006

... June 3, 2008

... Aug. 5, 2008

3rd T AP Aug. 8, 2006

Aug., ★(e) Aug., ★

... Sept. 12, 2006

Aug., ★ Aug. 8, 2008

... Sept. 19, 2006

... Mar. 7, 2006

...

Runoff

State (b)

Sept., 1st T after 2nd M

7th T Prior

Nat.

June, 2nd T June 13, 2006

Primary

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Massachusetts ..............

...

Mar., 1st T Mar. 4, 2008

General Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Maryland ......................

Runoff

(l) (m) ... Date not set at press time.

Primary

National (a)

Maine .............................

State or other jurisdiction

ELECTION DATES FOR NATIONAL, STATE AND LOCAL ELECTIONS – CONTINUED

General

Nat. Aug. 22, 2006

Nat.

Nat.

Nat. June 3, 2008

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat. (d) Aug. 29, 2006

Nat.

. . .Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Primary

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. (d) Nov. 7, 2006

... Nov. 4, 2008

Nat. Nov. 4, 2008

State Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

June, ★ Nov. 8, 2005

V Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 4, 2008

State Nov. 4, 2008

May, 1st T (d) Nov. 7, 2006

State (d) Nov. 7, 2006

V Nov. 7, 2006

V Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

...

Runoff

Nat.

...

...

Nat.

Sept., 2 wks

...

...

...

...

...

...

...

2nd T AP

...

...

...

...

...

Local General

Nat.

Nat. (d)

June, 2nd T (e)

Nat.

Nat. AP (d)

Nat.

Nat.

V

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

June, ★ (d)

Nat. (d)

V

V

Nat.

V

ELECTIONS

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The Book of the States 2005

Mar., 2nd T Mar. 11, 2008

(l) (m)

(l) ... Date not set at press time.

(l) ... Date not set at press time.

(l) (m)

May, 2nd T May 13, 2008

Sept., 2nd T Sept. 9, 2008

(l) (m)

(l) ... Date not set at press time.

Texas ..............................

Utah ...............................

Vermont (i) ...................

Virginia .........................

Washington ...................

West Virginia ................

Wisconsin ......................

Wyoming .......................

Dist. of Columbia .........

See footnotes at end of table.

...

Feb., 2nd T Feb. 12, 2008

Tennessee ......................

U.S. Virgin Islands .......

June, 1st T June 3, 2008

South Dakota ................

(j)

(l) June 1, 2008

South Carolina .............

American Samoa ..........

(l) ... Date not set at press time.

Rhode Island ................

General

Nat. June, 4th T

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008 Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

... ...

Sept., 2nd S Sept. 13, 2008

(j)

14 days after gen. Nov., ★ Nov. 21, 2008 Nov. 4, 2008

Aug., 1st T after 3rd M

Nat.

Nat.

Sept., 3rd T (o)

June, 2nd T

...

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Sept., 2nd T Sept. 12, 2006

Aug., 1st T★ Aug. 3, 2006

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nat.

June, 2nd T

Sept., 2nd T after 1st M

Nat.

Nat.

Primary

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov., ★ Nov. 4, 2008

Nov.,★ Nov. 4, 2008

...

...

...

...

...

Apr., 2nd T Apr. 8, 2008

...

2nd T AP June 17, 2008

...

April, 4th T Apr. 22, 2008

Pennsylvania ................

Runoff ...

May, 3rd T May 20, 2008

Primary

National (a)

Oregon ...........................

State or other jurisdiction

ELECTION DATES FOR NATIONAL, STATE AND LOCAL ELECTIONS – CONTINUED

14 day AP Sept. 27, 2008

14 days after gen.

...

... Aug. 22, 2006

... Sept. 12, 2006

... May 13, 2008

... Sept. 16, 2008

... June 14, 2005

...

... June 24, 2008

Nat. Mar. 7, 2006

...

Nat. June 6, 2006

2nd T AP June 13, 2006

... Sept. 12, 2006

... Apr. 25, 2006

... May 8, 2006

Runoff

State (b) General

Nov., 1st T Nov. 4, 2008

Nov., ★ Nov. 18, 2008

...

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Nat.

Nat. Apr. 11, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. June 13, 2006

Nat. June 27, 2006

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Primary Runoff

...

...

...

...

...

...

...

Nat.

...

...

State

...

...

...

Sept., 2nd S

(j) Nov. 4, 2008

14 days AP

...

Sept, 1st T after 2nd M . . .

State Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 4, 2008

State Nov. 4, 2008

State or Feb., last T Nov. 8, 2005

...

State Nov. 4, 2008

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Feb., 2nd T May, 1st T

State Nov. 7, 2006

State (d) Nov. 7, 2006

State Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Nat. Nov. 7, 2006

Local General

Nov., 1st T

(o)

Nov.,★

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

Nat. or May, 1st T

March, 1st T

Nat.

Nat.

Aug 1st T★

Nat.

Nat. (d)

Nat.

Nat.

Nat.

ELECTIONS


Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey of state election offices, October 2004 and state web sites, February 2005. Note: This table describes the basic formulas for determining when national, state and local elections will be held. For specific information on a particular state, the reader is advised to contact the specific state election administration office. All dates provided are based on the state election formula. Key: ★—First Tuesday after first Monday. . . .—No provision. M—Monday. T—Tuesday. TH—Thursday. S—Saturday. Nat.—Same date as national elections. State—Same date as state elections. Prior—Prior to general election. AP—After primary. V—Varies. (a) National refers to presidential elections. (b) State refers to election in which a state executive official or U.S. senator is to be elected. See Table 6.2, State Officials to be Elected. (c) Unless that date conflicts with Passover, then 1st Tuesday following last day of Passover. (d) In Delaware, elections are determined by city charter. In Iowa, partisan election only. In Kansas, state and county elections. In Minnesota, county elections only. In Mississippi, state and county elections are held together; municipal elections are held in separate years. In Montana, municipalities only. In New York, runoff in New York City only. In Ohio, municipalities and towns in odd years and counties in even years. In South Carolina, school boards vary. (e) Cities only. (f) Louisiana has an open primary which requires all candidates, regardless of party affiliation, to appear on a single ballot. If a candidate receives over 50 percent of the vote in the primary, that candi-

date is elected to the office. If no candidate receives a majority vote, then a single election is held between the two candidates receiving the most votes. For national elections, the first vote is held on the first Saturday in October of even-numbered years with the general election held on the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November. For state elections, the election is held on the second to last Saturday in October with the runoff being held on the fourth Saturday after first election. Local elections vary depending on the location and the year. (g) Except in presidential election year when congressional races correspond to Super Tuesday. (h) The primary election is held on the 4th Tuesday in August in each even-numbered year, including presidential election years. The presidential preferential primary is held on the 1st Tuesday in February during presidential election years. (i) In Vermont, if there is a tie in a primary or general election (and a recount does not resolve the tie) the appropriate superior could order a recessed election, among the tied candidates only, within three weeks of the recount. In state primary runoffs, the runoff election must be proclaimed within seven days after primary; after proclamation, election is held 15-22 days later. Local elections are held by annual town meetings which may vary depending on town charter. (j) American Samoa does not conduct primary elections (In addition, elections are conducted for territory-wide offices. There are no local elections). (k) Eight days before any other nomination process. (l) Formula not available at press time. (m) State did not hold a presidential primary in 2004. (n) On one designated day, following presidential nominating contests in the states of Iowa and New Hampshire and prior to the first Wednesday in March in every presidential election year, every political party entitled to a separate column may conduct a presidential preference caucus. Before August 15 of the odd-numbered year immediately preceding the presidential election year, the secretary of state shall designate the day after consulting with and taking recommendations from the two political parties casting the greatest vote for president of the United States at the most recent general elections when the office of president appeared on the ballot. (o) Must be held on the third Tuesday of the preceding September or on the seventh Tuesday immediately preceding such general election, whichever occurs first. (p) In Louisiana, a Congressional primary election is not held.

ELECTION DATES FOR NATIONAL, STATE AND LOCAL ELECTIONS — Continued

ELECTIONS

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359


ELECTIONS

Table 6.5 POLLING HOURS: GENERAL ELECTIONS State or other jurisdiction

Polls open

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

No later than 8 a.m. 7 a.m. 6 a.m. 7:30 a.m. 7 a.m.

Between 6 and 8 p.m. 8 p.m. 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8 p.m.

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

7 a.m. 6 a.m. 7 a.m. 7 a.m. 7 a.m.

7 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m.

Hawaii ................................. Idaho ....................................

7 a.m. 8 a.m.

6 p.m. 8 p.m.

Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

6 a.m. 6 a.m. 7 a.m.

7 p.m. 6 p.m. 9 p.m.

Polls close

Notes on hours (a)

Clerks have the option of opening polls at 7 a.m. Idaho is in two time zones—MST and PST.

Kansas .................................

7 a.m.

7 p.m.

Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ...................................

6 a.m. 6 a.m. Between 6 and 10 a.m.

6 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m.

Maryland ............................

7 a.m.

8 p.m.

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ...........................

No later than 7 a.m. 7 a.m. 7 a.m.

8 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m.

Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

7 a.m. 6 a.m.

7 p.m. 7 p.m.

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire ..................

7 a.m. 7 a.m MST/8 a.m. CST 7 a.m. No later than 11 a.m.

8 p.m. 7 p.m. MST/8 p.m. CST 7 p.m. No earlier than 7 p.m.

New Jersey ..........................

6 a.m.

8 p.m.

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota .....................

7 a.m. 6 a.m. 6:30 a.m. Between 7 and 9 a.m.

7 p.m. 9 p.m. 7:30 p.m. Between 7 and 9 p.m.

Ohio .....................................

6:30 a.m.

7:30 p.m.

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

7 a.m. 7 a.m. 7 a.m. 7 a.m. 7 a.m.

7 p.m. 8 p.m. 8 p.m. 9 p.m. 7 p.m.

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................

7 a.m. 8 a.m.

7 p.m. 7 p.m. CST/ 8 p.m. EST

Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

7 a.m. 7 a.m. Between 5 and 10 a.m.

7 p.m. 8 p.m. 7 p.m.

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................

6 a.m. 7 a.m. 6:30 a.m. 7 a.m.

7 p.m. 8 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8 p.m.

Wyoming .............................

7 a.m.

7 p.m.

Dist. of Columbia ............... Guam ................................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

7 a.m. 8 a.m. 7 a.m.

8 p.m. 8 p.m. 7 p.m.

Sources: The Council of State Governments survey, October 2003 and state election Web sites, January 2005. Note: Hours for primary, municipal and special elections may differ from

360

The Book of the States 2005

Counties may choose to open polls as early as 6 a.m. and close as late as 8 p.m. Applicable opening time depends on variables related to the size of the precinct.

Towns outside of the twin cities metro area with less than 500 inhabitants may have a later time for the polls to open as long as it is not later than 10 a.m.

Polling places with fewer than 200 electors may open at noon. Polling hours vary from town to town. The hours of 11 a.m. to 7 p.m. are by statute.

Counties must have polls open by 9 a.m., but can choose to open as early as 7 a.m. Polls must remain open until 7 p.m., but can be open as late as 9 p.m. The majority of polls in the state are open from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. in their respective time zones (CST and MST).

Poll hours are set by each county election commission. Polling places shall be open a minimum of 10 hours but no more than 13 hours. All polling locations in the eastern time zone shall close at 8 p.m. and those in the central time zone shall close at 7 p.m. The opening time for polls is set to by local boards of civil authority.

Polls in fourth class cities, villages and towns open at 9 a.m.; extendable by the governing body to no earlier than 7 a.m.

those noted. (a) In all states, voters standing in line when the polls close are allowed to vote; however, provisions for handling those voters vary across jurisdictions.


ELECTIONS

Table 6.6 VOTER REGISTRATION INFORMATION State or other jurisdiction

Closing date for Persons eligible registration before for absentee general election (days) registration (a)

Cut-off for receiving absentee ballots

Absentee votes Registration signed by witness Residency in other Criminal Mental or notary requirements places status competency

Alabama ..................... Alaska ......................... Arizona ....................... Arkansas ..................... California ...................

10 30 29 30 15

M/O A A A A

Close of polls 10 days after election 7 p.m. Election Day 7:30 p.m. Election Day 8 p.m. Election Day

N or 2W N or 2W ... ... ...

S, C (m) ... S, C, 29 (n) S

... ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Colorado ..................... Connecticut ................ Delaware .....................

29 14 20

A A A

... ... N or W

S, 30 S, T S (o)

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

... ... ★

Florida ........................ Georgia .......................

29 (b)

A A

7 p.m. Election Day 8 p.m. Election Day 12 p.m. day before election 7 p.m. Election Day Close of polls

W W (x)

S, C S, C

... ...

★ ★

★ ★

Hawaii ......................... Idaho ........................... Illinois ......................... Indiana ........................

30 25 28 29

Close of polls 8 p.m. Election Day Close of polls Close of polls

W (x) ... ... ...

S S, C, 30 S, P, 30 S, P, 30

... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ...

Iowa ............................

10 (c)

A A M/O C, D, E, M/O, O, P, T A

Kansas ........................ Kentucky .................... Louisiana ....................

15 29 30

A A A

Maine .......................... Maryland ....................

Election day 21

A A

Massachusetts ............ Michigan ..................... Minnesota ................... Mississippi ..................

20 30 Election day (d) 30

A A A A

Missouri ......................

28

A

Montana ..................... Nebraska .....................

30 (f)

A A

Nevada ........................ New Hampshire .........

(k) Election day (d)

New Jersey ..................

29

A

New Mexico ................ New York ....................

28 25

T A

North Carolina ...........

25

A

North Dakota ............. Ohio ............................

(e) 30

Oklahoma ................... Oregon ........................ Pennsylvania ..............

25 21 30

Rhode Island .............. South Carolina ........... South Dakota .............. Tennessee .................... Texas ........................... Utah ............................

M/O B, D, E, R, S, T

...

S

... ... N or 2W

S S, C, 28 S

★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★

N or 2W ...

S, M S, C

... ...

... ★

★ ★

10 days after election 8 p.m. Election Day Election Day 5 p.m. day before election Close of polls

... W (x) N or W W

S S, T, 30 (p) S, 20 S, C, 30

... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★

N

S

...

Close of polls 10 a.m. 2 days after election Close of polls 5 p.m. day after election 8 p.m. Election Day

... W

S, C, 30 S

... ...

★ ★

★ ★

... ...

S, C, 30; P, 10 (t) S (w)

... ...

★ ★

★ ...

Close of polls Close of polls Close of polls 12 a.m. day before election Close of polls Friday after election

W or N

S, C, 30 (q)

...

...

... W (x)

S S, C, 30 (r)

... ★

★ ★

★ ★

2W

S, C,30

...

(e) A

7 p.m. Election Day Postmarked day before election 5 p.m. day before election 2 days after election Close of polls

W (x) ...

(e) S, 30

(e) ...

(e) ★

(e) ★

7 p.m. Election Day 8 p.m. Election Day 5 p.m. Friday before election 9 p.m. Election Day Close of polls

N or W ... W (x)

S S S, P, 30

... ... ...

★ ★ ★

★ ... ...

30 30

A A B, D, M/O, O, P, R, S, T D B, C, D, S (i)

N or 2W W

S, 30 S (v)

... ...

★ ★

★ ★

15 30 30 20

A A A (g)

... W (x) (y) W (x)

S S S, C S, 30

... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

Vermont ......................

(l)

(h)

Close of polls Close of polls Before close of polls 12 p.m. Monday after election Close of polls

...

S

...

...

...

Virginia ....................... Washington ................. West Virginia .............. Wisconsin ................... Wyoming ....................

29 15 (c) 20 Election day (c)(u) Election day (d)

(j) M/O A A A

Close of polls 10 days after election Close of polls Close of polls 7 p.m. Election Day

W ... ... W ...

S, P S, C, P, 30 S S, 10 S (s)

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Dist. of Columbia ....... American Samoa ........ Guam .......................... Puerto Rico ................. U.S. Virgin Islands .....

30 30 10 50 30

A M/O A A M/O

10 days after election N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A.

... N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A.

D, 30 N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A.

★ N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A.

★ N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A.

★ N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A.

See footnotes at end of table.

The Council of State Governments

361


ELECTIONS

VOTER REGISTRATION INFORMATION — Continued Sources: Federal Election Commission, http://www.fec.gov., December 2003 and Election Assistance Commission, March 2004 Key: ★—Column 6: State provision prohibiting registration or claiming the right to vote in another state or jurisdiction. Columns 7 and 8: State provision regarding criminal status or mental competency. . . .—No state provision. N.A.—Information not available. Column 4: N—Notary, W—Witness. Numbers indicated the number of signatures required. Column 5: S—State, C—County, D—District, M—Municipality, P—Precinct, T—Town. Numbers represent the number of days before an election for which one must be a resident. Note: Previous editions of this chart contained a column for Automatic cancellation of registration for failure to vote for ___ years. However, the National Voter Registration Act requires a confirmation notice prior to any cancellation and thus effectively bans any automatic cancellation of voter registration. In addition, all states and territories except Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands allow mail-in registration. (a) In this column: A—All of these; B—Absent on business; C—Senior citizen; D—Disabled persons; E—Not absent, but prevented by employment from registering; M/O—No absentee registration except military and oversees citizens as required by federal law; O—Out of state; P—Out of precinct (or municipality in PA); R—Absent for religious reasons; S—Students; T— Temporarily out of jurisdiction. (b) The 5th Monday before a general primary, general election, or presidential preference primary; the 5th day after the date of the call for all other special primaries and special elections. (c) By mail: Iowa 15 days; Washington 30 days; Wisconsin, 13 days. (d) Minnesota—delivered 21 days before an election or election-day registration at polling precincts; New Hampshire– Received by city or town clerk 10 days before election or election-day registration at precincts; Wyoming– delivered 30 days before or election-day registration at polling precincts. (e) No voter registration. (f) Received by the 2nd Friday before election or postmarked by the 3rd Friday before the election. (g) There are several criteria including religious reasons, disabled, etc., or if the voter otherwise expects to be absent from the precinct on election day. (h) Anyone unable to register in person. (i) In South Carolina, all the following are eligible for absentee registra-

362

The Book of the States 2005

tion in addition to those categories already listed: electors with a death in the family within 3 days before the election; overseas military, Red Cross, U.S.O. government employees, and their dependents and spouses residing with them; persons on vacation; persons admitted to the hospital as emergency patients 4 days prior to election; persons confined to jail or pre-trial facility pending disposition of arrest/trial; and persons attending sick/disabled persons. (j) In Virginia, the following temporarily out of jurisdiction persons are eligible for absentee registration: (1)uniformed services voters on active duty, merchant marine, and persons temporarily residing overseas by virtue of employment (and spouse/dependents of these persons residing with them), who are not normally absent from their locality, or have been absent and returned to reside within 28 days prior to an election, may register in person up to and including the day of the election; (2) members of uniformed services discharged from active duty during 60 days preceding election (and spouse/dependents) may register, if otherwise qualified, in person up to and including the day of the election. (k) By 9 p.m. on the 5th Saturday preceding any primary or general election. (l) Postmarked, submitted or accepted by noon on the 2nd Saturday before an election (m) At the time of registration. (n) Must live in Arkansas at the address in Box 2 of your voter application. (o) Must be a permanent state resident. (p) Must be a resident of the town or city at least 30 days before election day. (q) Must be a resident of the state and county at your address for 30 days before election. (r) Must be a resident of the county or the City of New York at least 30 days before election. (s) Must be an actual and physically bona fide resident. (t) Must have continuously resided in the state and county at least 30 days and in precinct at least 10 days before election. Must claim no other place as legal residence. (u) Registration may be completed in the local voter registration office 1 day before the election. (v) Must claim the address on the application as your only legal place of residence. (w) Must have a permanent established domicile in the state. (x) Only if assisted by another party (y) If unable to sign.


The Council of State Governments

2002 2004 2002 2002 2002 2002 2002 2004 2002 2002 2002

2002 2002 2002 2002 2003 2003 2002 2003 2004 2004 2002 2002 2002 2002 2001 2004

Midwestern Region Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................. Iowa ...................................... Kansas .................................. Michigan .............................. Minnesota ............................ Nebraska .............................. North Dakota ....................... Ohio ...................................... South Dakota ....................... Wisconsin ............................. Regional total ......................

Southern Region Alabama ............................... Arkansas ............................... Florida .................................. Georgia ................................. Kentucky .............................. Louisiana (a) ........................ Maryland .............................. Mississippi ........................... Missouri ............................... North Carolina ..................... Oklahoma ............................. South Carolina ..................... Tennessee ............................. Texas .................................... Virginia ................................ West Virginia ....................... Regional total ......................

See footnotes at end of table.

2002 2004 2002 2002 2002 2001 2002 2002 2002 2002

Eastern Region Connecticut .......................... Delaware .............................. Maine ................................... Massachusetts ...................... New Hampshire ................... New Jersey ........................... New York (c) ....................... Pennsylvania ........................ Rhode Island ........................ Vermont ................................ Regional total ......................

State

Date of last election Democrat Independent Other

Total votes

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 741 741 0 0 399 0 0 46,269 36 0 121,438 0 18,831 186,973 2,170,275 789,682 280,076 383,944 1,630,071 465,606 209,066 77,732 1,365,753 179,301 1,053,243 8,604,749

357,497 435,310 0 0 792,807 92,237 279,097 0 0 371,334 (d) 1,357,381 0 0 1,357,381 511,249 434,893 (d) 0 0 946,142 160,050 298,082 0 0 458,341 ..............................................(a).......................................... 256,486 581,885 2953 71 841,395 177,122 504,319 0 0 681,441 604,757 847,748 0 3,755 1,456,260 364,420 444,559 0 0 808,979 205,876 350,389 0 0 556,265 384,944 114,346 0 0 499,290 534,824 539,018 0 809 1,074,651 1,003,388 620,463 (d) 0 0 1,623,851 ..............................................(b).......................................... 26,041 149,362 0 0 175,403 4,678,891 6,956,852 2,953 4,653 11,643,540

917,759 1,252,516 505,758 283,924 199,234 80,443 (d) 296,094 87,850 (d) 583,391 1,046,680 195,099 224,238 147,718 61,312 42,135 35,597 658,700 (d) 585,615 (d) 111,264 68,037 803,439 230,232 4,460,591 3,788,151

..............................................(b).......................................... 21,670 31,799 0 0 53,459 78,783 71,735 (d) 0 1,613 152,131 227,960 (d) 746,190 0 2,752 976,902 155,952 69,965 0 0 225,917 336,948 262,086 0 0 599,034 20,936 633,078 18,598 0 672,612 538,757 (d) 1,242,236 0 0 1,780,993 26,824 122,535 0 399 149,758 27,462 31,143 0 2,171 60,776 1,435,292 3,210,767 18,598 6,935 4,671,582

Republican

Primary election Percent Democrat Percent Independent

General election Percent

672,225 427,082 2,856,845 1,041,700 596,284 676,484 561,884 470,404 1,382,419 1,495,021 441,277 585,422 786,803 2,632,591 887,234 253,131 15,766,806

1,594,960 1,302,912 456,612 376,830 1,506,104 999,473 330,349 220,803 1,865,007 189,920 734,779 9,577,749 49.2 53.0 56.0 51.4 55.0 48.0 32.7 52.6 50.8 42.8 42.6 52.8 47.6 57.8 47.0 34.0 49.9

45.1 53.2 44.5 45.1 47.4 44.4 68.7 71.3 57.7 56.8 41.4 49.3 669,105 378,250 2,201,427 937,070 487,159 731,358 979,740 409,787 1,301,442 1,939,154 448,143 521,140 837,284 1,819,798 984,177 472,758 15,117,792

1,847,040 1,113,900 540,449 441,858 1,633,796 821,268 132,348 84,877 1,236,924 140,263 800,515 8,793,238 48.9 46.9 43.2 46.2 45.0 52.0 57.1 45.8 47.9 55.6 43.3 47.1 50.6 40.0 52.2 63.5 47.8

52.2 45.4 52.7 52.9 51.4 36.5 27.5 27.4 38.3 41.9 45.2 45.3

0 0 0 0 0 0 169,244 0 0 0 146,200 0 28,704 0 0 0 344,148

23,089 0 0 0 0 9,698 0 4,193 0 2,393 10,489 49,862

0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 9.9 0.0 0.0 0.0 14.1 0.0 1.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1

0.7 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.4 0.0 1.3 0.0 0.7 0.5 0.2

573,958 56.0% 448,984 44.0% 0 0.0% ................................................. Results not available before this publication 209,496 41.5 238,179 47.1 10,612 2.1 1,091,988 49.8 985,981 44.9 15,335 0.7 259,663 58.8 169,277 38.3 0 0.0 928,174 41.7 1,256,853 56.4 0 0.0 2,262,255 49.4 1,534,064 33.5 654,016 14.3 1,589,408 44.4 1,913,235 53.4 0 0.0 181,827 54.8 150,229 45.2 0 0.0 103,436 45.5 97,565 42.9 22,922 10.1 7,200,205 47.6 6,794,367 44.9 702,885 4.6

Republican

Table 6.7 VOTING STATISTICS FOR GUBERNATORIAL ELECTIONS BY REGION: 2001–2004

Percent

Total votes

25,723 210 42,309 47,123 0 0 6,200 14,296 35,678 52,513 0 1,163 376 101,538 15,310 18,544 360,983

73,794 31,684 28,741 17,004 37,665 422,034 18,294 0 127,061 1,983 229,566 987,826

1.9 0.0 0.8 2.4 0.0 0.0 0.3 1.6 1.1 0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 2.2 0.8 0.2 0.1

2.1 0.1 2.8 2.0 1.2 18.7 3.8 0.0 4.0 0.6 12.9 5.0

1,367,053 805,542 5,100,581 2,025,893 1,083,443 1,407,842 1,717,068 894,487 2,719,599 3,486,688 1,035,620 1,107,725 1,653,167 4,553,927 1,886,721 744,433 31,589,789

3,538,883 2,448,496 1,025,802 835,692 3,177,565 2,252,473 480,991 309,873 3,228,992 334,559 1,775,349 19,408,675

0 0.0% 1,022,942 ...................................................... 46,903 9.3 505,190 100,875 4.6 2,194,179 13,028 2.9 441,968 42,138 1.9 2,227,165 128,743 2.8 4,579,078 79,346 2.2 3,581,989 0 0.0 332,056 3,446 1.5 227,369 414,479 2.7 15,111,936

Other

ELECTIONS

363


364

The Book of the States 2005

2002 2002 2002 2002 2002 2002 2004 2002 2002 2002 2004 2004 2002

Democrat Independent Other

Total votes

2,103,793 2,123,768 109,905 38,234 4,375,700

72,248 32,547 0 2,723 107,518 320,090 234,084 0 3,263 557,437 2,328,937 2,402,077 56,268 401,769 5,286,204 189,705 98,897 0 0 288,602 79,871 188,781 0 1,463 270,115 145,549 38,083 0 1,106 184,738 110,198 94,795 0 0 204,993 117,474 88,974 0 0 206,448 98,320 168,496 0 0 266,816 357,764 374,246 109,905 16,610 858,525 ..............................................(b).......................................... 521,889 768,066 0 13,069 1,303,024 90,685 36,799 0 0 127,484 4,432,730 4,525,845 166,173 440,003 9,661,904

Republican

Primary election

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey of election administration offices, October 2003 and March 2005 and state elections web sites. Key: (a) Louisiana has an open primary which requires all candidates, regardless of party affiliation, to appear on a single ballot. If a candidate receives over 50 percent of the vote in the primary, he is elected to the office. If no

Western Region Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................. California ............................. Colorado ............................... Hawaii .................................. Idaho .................................... Montana ............................... Nevada ................................. New Mexico ......................... Oregon .................................. Utah ...................................... Washington .......................... Wyoming .............................. Regional total ...................... Regional total without California ...............

State

Date of last election

50.8

5,239,454 4,462,276

94,216 566,284 3,533,490 475,373 179,647 171,711 225,016 110,935 268,693 530,708 373,670 1,373,361 92,662 7,995,766

Democrat

43.3

40.7% 46.2 47.3 33.7 46.6 41.7 50.4 22.0 55.5 41.0 41.2 48.8 50.0 44.9

Percent

298,617

0 84,947 0 0 0 13 0 0 0 213,657 0 0 0 298,617

Independent

General election

2.8

0.0% 6.9 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 16.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.6

Percent

297,226

7,989 20,415 773,020 52,646 8,801 8,187 15,817 49,143 26,466 32,153 8,220 63,465 3,924 1,070,246

Other

2.8

3.5% 1.7 10.3 3.7 2.3 2.0 3.5 9.7 5.5 2.4 0.9 2.2 2.1 6.0

Percent

10,297,573

231,484 1,226,111 7,476,311 1,412,602 385,457 411,477 446,146 504,079 484,233 1,293,761 906,706 2,810,058 185,459 17,773,884

Total votes

candidate receives a majority vote, then a single election is held between the two candidates receiving the most votes. (b) Candidate nominated by convention. (c) Total includes the Conservative Party. Governor Pataki was the candidate for both parties. (d) Candidate ran unopposed.

55.8% 45.2 42.4 62.6 51.1 56.3 46.0 68.2 39.0 40.1 57.8 48.8 47.9 47.3

Percent

129,279 554,465 3,169,801 884,583 197,009 231,566 205,313 344,001 189,074 517,243 524,816 1,373,232 88,873 8,409,255

Republican

VOTING STATISTICS FOR GUBERNATORIAL ELECTIONS BY REGION — Continued

ELECTIONS


ELECTIONS

Table 6.8 VOTER TURNOUT FOR PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS BY REGION: 1996, 2000 AND 2004 (In thousands) 2004 State or other jurisdiction

Voting age population Number (a) registered

2000 Number voting (b)

Voting age population Number (a) registered

1996 Number voting (b)

Voting age Number population Number voting (a) registered (b)

U.S. Total ............................

208,247

170,937

122,501

205,410

156,420

105,587

195,193

132,796

96,414

Eastern Region Connecticut .......................... Delaware .............................. Maine ................................... Massachusetts ...................... New Hampshire ................... New Jersey ........................... New York ............................. Pennsylvania ........................ Rhode Island ........................ Vermont ................................ Regional total ......................

2,574 594 1,042 4,931 991 6,669 14,206 9,404 803 490 41,700

1,823 554 957 3,973 690 5,009 11,837 8,367 709 419 34,338

1,579 376 741 2,927 678 3,612 7,448 5,770 437 312 23,879

2,499 582 968 4,749 911 6,245 13,805 9,155 753 460 40,127

1,874 505 882 4,009 857 4,711 11,263 7,782 655 427 32,965

1,460 328 652 2,734 569 3,187 6,960 4,912 409 294 21,505

2,300 547 934 4,623 860 6,124 13,564 9,197 751 430 39,330

1,900 (c) 1,001 (c) 755 (c) 9,161 6,806 603 385 20,611

750 271 606 2,556 514 3,076 6,439 4,506 390 261 19,369

Midwestern Region Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................. Iowa ...................................... Kansas .................................. Michigan .............................. Minnesota ............................ Nebraska .............................. North Dakota ....................... Ohio ...................................... South Dakota ....................... Wisconsin ............................. Regional total ......................

9,423 4,592 2,152 2,038 7,541 3,823 1,257 487 8,604 573 4,119 44,609

8,594 4,009 2,107 1,694 7,164 2,977 1,160 (d) 7,973 502 (d) 36,180

5,274 2,468 1,522 1,188 4,876 2,828 778 316 5,722 388 2,997 28,357

8,983 4,448 2,165 1,983 7,358 3,547 1,234 477 8,433 543 3,930 43,101

7,129 4,001 1,841 1,624 6,861 3,265 1085 (c) 7,538 471 (d) 33,815

4,742 2,180 1,314 1072 4,233 2,439 697 288 4,702 316 2,599 24,582

11,431 4,146 2,138 1,823 7,072 3,412 1,208 437 8,300 530 3,786 44,283

6,663 3,500 1,776 1,257 6,677 2,730 1,015 (c) 6,638 456 (d) 30,712

4,418 2,135 1,252 1,129 3,849 2,211 677 272 4,534 324 2,196 22,997

Southern Region Alabama ............................... Arkansas ............................... Florida .................................. Georgia ................................. Kentucky .............................. Louisiana .............................. Maryland .............................. Mississippi ........................... Missouri ............................... North Carolina ..................... Oklahoma ............................. South Carolina ..................... Tennessee ............................. Texas .................................... Virginia ................................ West Virginia ....................... Regional total ......................

3,252 1,960 12,539 6,080 3,012 3,092 3,922 2,014 4,297 5,978 2,515 2,967 4,284 14,996 5,194 1,406 77,508

2,597 1,686 10,301 4,968 2,819 2,806 3,105 1,865 4,194 5,537 2,143 2,315 3,532 13,098 4,528 1,169 66,663

1,883 1,055 7,610 3,302 1,796 1,943 2,384 1,140 2,731 3,501 1,464 1,618 2,437 7,411 3,195 756 44,226

3,333 1,929 11,774 5,893 2,993 3,255 3,925 2,047 4,105 5,797 2,531 2,977 4,221 14,850 5,263 1,416 76,309

2,529 1,556 8,753 3,860 2,557 2,730 2,715 1,740 3,861 5,122 2,234 2,157 3,181 10,268 3,770 1,068 58,101

1,666 922 5,963 2,583 1,544 1,766 2,024 994 2,360 2,915 1,234 1,386 2,076 6,407 2,790 648 37,278

3,220 1,873 11,043 5,396 2,928 3,137 3,811 1,961 3,902 5,800 2,419 2,872 3,660 13,698 5,089 1,414 72,223

2,471 1,369 8,078 3,811 2,391 (c) 2,577 1,826 3,343 4,300 1,823 1,814 3,056 10,541 3,323 (c) 50,723

1,534 884 5,444 2,299 1,388 1,784 1,794 894 2,158 2,515 1,206 1,203 1,894 5,612 2,417 636 33,662

460 3,800 22,075 3,246 873 950 680 1,580 1,318 2,665 1,522 4,456 370 43,995

472 2,643 16,557 2,890 647 798 638 1,094 1,105 2,120 1,278 2,884 246 33,372

313 2,013 12,421 2,130 432 598 450 830 756 1,837 928 2,859 244 25,811

436 3,625 24,873 3,067 909 921 668 1390 1,263 2,530 1,465 4,368 358 45,873

474 2,173 15,707 2,274 637 728 698 898 973 1,944 1123 3,336 220 31,185

286 1,532 10,966 1,741 368 502 411 609 599 1,534 771 2,487 214 22,020

410 3,233 19,527 2,843 882 858 647 1,180 1,224 2,344 1,322 4,122 343 38,935

415 2,245 15,662 2,285 545 700 590 778 838 1,962 1,050 3,078 241 30,389

245 1,404 10,263 1,551 370 492 417 464 580 1,399 691 2,294 216 20,386

21,920

16,815

13,390

21,000

15,478

11,054

19,408

14,727

10,123

435

384

228

411

354

202

422

361

186

Western Region Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................. California ............................. Colorado ............................... Hawaii .................................. Idaho .................................... Montana ............................... Nevada ................................. New Mexico ......................... Oregon .................................. Utah ...................................... Washington .......................... Wyoming .............................. Regional total ...................... Regional total without California .......... Dist. of Columbia ................

Sources: 1996 data provided by Committee for the Study of the American Electorate, with update by the state election administration offices. U.S. Congress, Clerk of the House, Statistics of the Presidential and Congressional Election, 2004, U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, November 2002, released July 2004. The Council of State Governments’ survey of election officials, January 2002. 2000 data provided by the Federal Election Commission.

Key: (a) Estimated population, 18 years old and over. Includes armed forces in each state, aliens, and institutional population. (b) Number voting is number of ballots cast in presidential race. (c) Information not available. (d) No statewide registration required. Excluded from totals for persons registered.

The Council of State Governments

365


ETHICS

Trends and Issues in State Ethics Agencies By David E. Freel States vary greatly in how they identify and define “ethics” in the public sector. Meaningful and accurate comparisons of remedial state ethics processes are therefore difficult to easily render. However, ethics governance that involves standards of conduct and protections against conflicts of interest within the states often shares common traits. These traits include the creation of boards designed with oversight independent of appointment authorities, often delegated a trio of educational, advisory, and enforcement authority, in order to administer uniform standards and financial disclosure for public officers. These bodies share a vital goal of securing increased protection to the broader public interest by recognizing and limiting the inherent or acquired personal and familial conflicts of interest of those public servants who make and implement public policy and expend public funds. Trend issues in ethics involve a reexamination of state ethics boards and their processes, questions regarding what ethical standards apply to the privatization of public duties, continuing controversy over alleged improprieties attributed to gifts and gratuities and/or unique private sector and nonprofit interests acquired by those serving the public, and efforts to enhance traditional compliance models with values principles.

Introduction—Comparing the States Drawing general comparisons aimed at readily classifying or categorizing processes designed to oversee standards of conduct or identifying noteworthy ethics developments throughout the states is often difficult. As this author has previously noted, when ethics comparisons or trends are summarized to generalizations, all too often they are misleading or incorrect.1 Apart from differences in demographics, summaries often fail to explain legitimate regional, political or jurisdictional factors or variations that bring about change or reconsideration. In addition, ethics oversight presents a unique number of core factors that compound attempts to simplify comparison. These include: how states define “ethics,” (nearly all states regulate ethics and disclosure, but in varying degree and subject matter), the breadth of those governed (some states regulate only state executive officials; others, both state and local officials, and/or local public employees or those in the private sector interacting with public agencies), the extent of authority granted oversight agencies, and the nature and composition of those governing ethical conduct.2 However, the majority of state boards and commissions share some common attributes. 366

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State Ethics Boards and Commissions The National Conference of State Legislatures identifies entities with ethics oversight authority in each of the states.3 With respect to state executive officials, however, 11 states place ethics statutes or rule provisions and their regulative processes under the authority of a single officeholder, rather than within a board or commission.4 Montana places responsibility with a commissioner.5 The Council on Governmental Ethics Laws (COGEL), composed in large part of ethics, campaign finance, lobbying and public records entities largely in the United States and Canada, lists 40 different state boards, committees, commissions and/ or individual commissioners that govern ethical conflicts of interests, standards of conduct and disclosure. Some of these boards or commissions serve as legislative committees assigned specific ethics responsibility for their members.6 This compilation also includes more than one ethics oversight body in a few states (such as Washington, Kentucky and Ohio) that separate ethics authority among the three branches of government. A recent research report prepared in November of 2004 for the Connecticut General Assembly by its Office of Legislative Research examined ethics oversight throughout the country, and focused primarily upon the executive branch. This report concludes that there are 36 state boards and commissions that administer codes of ethics for state officials.7 Underscoring the difficulties in comparative “ethics” analysis of state board authority highlighted at the outset of this article, this author tallies a total of 38 state boards and commissions (35 of which are listed in the research report) that have executive branch conflict of interest ethics responsibilities.8


ETHICS Despite unique individual characteristics, these 38 state boards or commissions have many similarities. They often embody authority apart from those they govern, in an effort to operate as independent bodies, with membership configured in an odd rather than an even number, and delegated power to administer conflict of interest standards and personal disclosure requirements, usually through a trio of educational, advisory and investigative processes. Many of the 38 govern conflict of interest restraints on public officials that are described in similar language. Most have authority across branches of government and many have lobbying jurisdiction as an additional part of their “ethics� oversight. While challenges to the efficacy of their mission may occur, many of these bodies exhibit a volume of work in applying ethics statutes or rule provisions to those they govern.9 Whether by statute or rule, these provisions are largely designed at reducing personal conflicts of interest in public decision-making process and the implementation of public policy on behalf of the broader public interest.

Independent Ethics Boards and Commissions Challenges to the real or perceived independence of boards or commissions assigned the duty of ethics oversight may be a constant,10 particularly due to the reality of their duties and/or their continuing evolution. Legislation creating the vast majority, 31 of the 38 state boards and commissions, established these entities to stand apart from and hold power over their appointing authorities, with many having separate budgets and staffing.11 Historically, some boards have demonstrated this independence by taking actions against the interests of their appointing authority, even in the face of litigation or other challenges.12 (Boards largely composed of cabinet appointees, however, or those perceived as failing to exercise independence from their appointing authority, continue to experience questions regarding their effectiveness, as discussed in ethics trends below.) To achieve autonomy, states are significantly split over whether the governor of the state serves as the sole appointing authority, or whether board appointments are divided among senior executive, legislative or judicial officers. Regardless, most states utilize balancing measures over board composition either through empowering separate appointing authorities or by generally subjecting appointments to legislative confirmation. To further support the autonomy of ethics authority, most of these boards routinely have the power to

hire their own staff and manage their own budget. In fact, nine of these boards and commissions, charged largely with combined ethics, disclosure and other duties, often with state and local oversight (Alabama, Florida, Massachusetts, Ohio and Pennsylvania serve as examples), retain annual budgets of $1 to 2 million, with staff size between 11 and 30.13 The California Fair Practices Commission stands out as the largest, with a current budget of $6 million and a staff of 60.14 While the ability to manage a budget supports board independence, securing adequate funding and resources for the authority of many of these agencies, especially for smaller boards, and particularly in times of across-the-board general revenue funding cuts, is often argued to be a fundamental factor of true board independence and effectiveness that remains an ongoing concern in many states, having seen double-digit budget cuts or reductions.15 Due to the role of ethics oversight, one vital key to the successful operation of these boards is that their actions be viewed as objective and impartial. While the experiences of the author and others indicate that this is ultimately most dependent upon the quality and integrity of individual board appointees, regardless of past expertise as a regulated public official, 16 many states attempt to instill impartiality and finality in board composition. They do so by not only varying appointing authorities or mandating legislative, judicial or non-partisan panel participation in their selection, but also by restricting the total number of board members from any one political party to less than a majority, and by establishing an odd, rather than even, number of board members, or by placing other limitations on terms.17 (As an example, one of the seven state boards that stand in contrast to the majority, the Ohio Ethics Commission, established in 1974, has an even number of members, mandated by law in Ohio to be three Democrats and three Republicans.) Of note in other types of limitations upon board membership, although not included in the 38 ethics boards, is the membership limitation within the Arizona Citizens Elections Commission. The commission was created upon voter initiative in 1998 to address issues of campaign finance, and statute restricts its membership to no more than two of five members from any one county.18 Considering the routine dominance of state board members from or around capital cities, this is an interesting control on board composition. The Alabama Ethics Commission, now 30 years old, represents a classic example of public policy efforts to establish an independent state ethics board. It has partisanship limitations on its five The Council of State Governments

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ETHICS members, who are individually appointed by executive and legislative leaders, all subject to Senate confirmation. Board members cannot otherwise be public officials, candidates or lobbyists. Less stereotypically, former commission employees also cannot be members. 19 In fact, statute in Alabama attempts to further dictate the ethical quality of commission appointees, stating “each of whom shall be a fair, equitable citizen of this state and of high moral character and ability.” 20

Delegated Powers Most state ethics boards are delegated a trio of process responsibilities to implement ethics authority that include educational or training functions, the ability to render advice construing ethics statutes or rules as they apply to regulated populations, and some enforcement or investigative ability to examine or sanction the conduct of those regulated.21 In recent years, one trend has been to focus increasing attention to education as an integral part of ethics oversight. In many states, while compliance standards may have predominated initial concepts of reform, education is now a mandatory, rather than voluntary, requirement upon those in state executive positions, either as a matter of law or chief executive order.22 While often described as compliance training, educational focus upon increasing awareness of public policy restraints governing the conduct of public servants and assisting in recognizing personal interests that conflict with public interest has also been supplemented with values-based presentations and discussions.23 While a few state boards rely upon the assistance of their state attorney general or other outside legal advisors to assist the board’s role in rendering advisory opinions or providing investigative and/or enforcement services to the board, the authority of many boards provides for a specialized focus on ethics provisions to be accomplished by the staff of the board.24 Some states provide that this ethics advice gives unique protection to the requester. In Ohio, for example, a written opinion in response to prospective circumstances, if fully followed, provides immunity from criminal prosecution, civil suit, and removal from office based upon an alleged ethics law violation. In the recent dismissal of an appeal to a criminal conviction under that state’s ethics-related statutes in late 2003, the chief justice of the Ohio Supreme Court took the opportunity of the dismissal to acknowledge and support this authority.25 368

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Such a legislative delegation of authority provides protection to those with clear questions regarding the future application of ethics statutes. This protection serves not only to encourage questions before the public servant acts or the public interest is subjected to allegations of a competing conflict, but also enables requesters to receive reliable transparent advice that stands independent of their personal view of their own conflict. Most state ethics boards also have a third companion process involving some level of separate investigative and/or enforcement capabilities.26 The author has previously discussed differences in state ethics investigative and enforcement processes.27 Regardless, while the breadth of this authority varies greatly across the states, the specialized expertise of these boards and their staffs to examine alleged misconduct is often not replicated in other governing authorities. The power to participate in the enforcement of ethics protections remains a significant component of the implementation of a uniform standard of behavior and is part of the public expectation of some remedial response to unethical conduct. Whether the form of oversight chosen by an individual state is to empower a board with adequate resources to effectively investigate and refer misconduct to others for enforcement, or to delegate the imposition of civil or administrative sanctions, this responsibility is crucial to securing a more consistent adherence to ethics laws, not only to benefit the public, but also for fairness to those public servants who observe the standards. With delegated powers of education, advice and investigation, most state boards and commissions oversee a similar regime of statutory or administrative rule provisions that apply to gifts and other tangible forms of value, family, or the outside business relationships of public officials. These restraints are designed to protect against either the appearance or reality of improper influence upon public policy. While most states bar things of value coming to public officials at certain dollar or floor levels of substance from those who do business and/or are regulated by the public officials or their agencies, states also generally impose limits upon the conduct of public officials while in their public role, and under “revolving door” provisions, for a period after they leave their public role. Comparisons of those standards can also be found in the ethics literature.28 The breadth and limitations of these laws and standards involving governmental ethical conduct, and the processes used to


ETHICS implement them, however, continue to generate trend ethical issues throughout the country.

Trends—The Reassessment of Ethics Boards and Processes During 2004, a critical analysis of the composition and processes of state boards and commissions having conflicts of interest and standards of conduct authority began in a number of states. Following the history of ethics reform, this reexamination of processes comes in the wake of public attention within several states that experienced alleged or evidenced ethical breaches at the highest levels of state government. In Connecticut, a series of ethical lapses at the state level culminated with the former governor of Connecticut resigning in the summer of 2004, in the face of impeachment for the improper receipt of gifts from those doing business with the state. That state’s ethics commission is currently undergoing intense scrutiny regarding their ability to independently investigate their appointing authority, their processes to do so, and the effectiveness of their staff, including the removal of their former director.29 Ironically, this scrutiny of the Connecticut Ethics Commission comes after the commission and its former director secured an admission from their past governor that he had lied in a previous commission settlement of issues related to improper gifts, and follows the governor’s recent guilty plea to federal corruption charges and pending criminal charges against other senior state officials in his administration.30 Critics have suggested that the commission should be reconstituted with members outside of the appointment authority of the governor, such as former judges, or a greater proportion of public members. In New Jersey, public attention to another series of state scandals, and questions regarding the role of the New Jersey Executive Commission on Ethical Standards in failing to identify or adequately respond to those allegations, lead the new governor in November of 2004 to the appointment of two “special ethics counsel” to conduct an audit of the effectiveness of that state’s ethics commission.31 These special ethics counsels have been charged with identifying “potential improvements in ethics laws, regulations, codes, training, compliance monitoring and enforcement” and are to return a report to the governor within 120 days. New Jersey, unlike the majority of its state counterparts contrasted above, requires commission appointees to come from within the executive branch,

appointed to the commission by their chief executive, with concurrent terms to his.32 Seven must be either state officers or employees in the executive branch; two are public members. In January 2006, the makeup of the commission will change to four executive branch members and four public members. With critical review and recommendation to come shortly into 2005 from special ethics counsel, it will be interesting to observe what significant changes may be suggested to a board composition where independence may be less assured by the nature of appointees, or what other enhancements in duties and resources for ethics oversight are proposed. At least two other states are reviewing or have overhauled the authority of their ethics board and their processes as 2004 concluded and 2005 begins. The Massachusetts Ethics Commission recently acquired rule-making powers it requested to augment authority. The enactment of this power has been described as allowing the commission to create “‘safe harbors’ for conduct that may be prohibited by the literal language of the law but that does not offend its purpose.”33 However, recently, the chairman and its members also voted to conduct an ethics “audit” of the agency and its performance in response to concerns about whether the commission has focused its authority on alleged serious rather than more routine misconduct.34 In 2004, the Illinois General Assembly passed new ethics legislation, including the creation of an Executive Ethics Commission. Illinois had an executive branch ethics board in earlier years under executive order, composed of executive branch officials, which had been discontinued. The new Illinois Executive Ethics Commission consists of nine commissioners appointed by state constitutional officers, with the attorney general serving as an advisor. The commission is to provide public information, receive complaints, conduct administrative hearings, issue subpoenas, and make rulings and recommendations in disciplinary cases. The Commission has jurisdiction over the employees and officers of the executive branch.35 These varied developments in ethics oversight in states have consistently followed attention to alleged or founded misconduct by senior state officials within their respective jurisdictions. Additional questions of alleged favoritism and conflicts of interest have brought another trend ethics issue to general attention, the question of what, if any ethical standards apply to privatization of public services and no-bid contracts for service provision. The Council of State Governments

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Privatization and Ethical Standards The privatization of traditional services provided by government has raised significant questions about what, if any, ethical standards apply in the award of public contracts to provide public services, as well as to whether those performing services must meet conflict of interest or other ethics restraints. Florida, Maryland, Connecticut, New Jersey and California have all faced recent challenges to alleged conflicts of interest in contracts, often not subjected to competitive bid processes, which have been granted to companies to perform various types of services to state citizens.36 While some of these challenges have focused upon allegations of the improper influence of political contributions made by those who have secured public contracts, others have focused upon allegations of improper gift giving or political cronyism in the award of state business. New Jersey’s response has been the enactment of a so-called “play-to-pay” statute seen as far-reaching in its impact on restrictions upon the award of public contracts to campaign contributors.37 Although often part of ethics reform initiatives, these limitations on un-bid contracts to campaign contributors are also viewed as a part of campaign finance or lobbying reform.38 In some states, proposed remedies to questions of conflicts involving the award of contracts include increased disclosure by those soliciting contracts or those who will perform the contracted services.39 While a few states have addressed potential ethical conflicts created by the state transitioning existing public services to the private sector,40 the question of what ethical standards, if any, apply to those in the private sector performing ongoing services to the public appears to be a question for future ethics attention. This attention is warranted if the notion of conflicts of interest and standards of conduct is to protect the public from the improper influences of personal or financial conflicts of interest in securing purchases or service provision. Particularly in light of recent ethics issues within the private sector, it is doubtful that alleged conflicts of interest in the acquisition of the best and most economical public services will be viewed by the public as alleviated solely because they are conducted by private sector providers.

Gifts and Gratuities and Other Unique Conflicts of Interest Issues of gifts and gratuities continue to be a trend topic throughout the states in 2004, not only among state executive officials, but also in other sectors of 370

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public officials, such as the judicial community.41 Reforms being considered in executive branch agencies discussed earlier in this article have largely emerged from state scandals involving gifts. Connecticut’s consideration of reform comes in the wake of the resignation and criminal guilty plea to federal charges by the former governor that emanated from allegations of improper gift giving. The former Illinois governor’s indictment by the United States Attorney’s Office on criminal charges stemming from gifts and vacations given to him and members of his administration to steer state business, led to the creation of a new ethics oversight body in Illinois, as previously highlighted. Scandals in Indiana have also led its governor to ban gifts to executive officials, as well as proposals by the speaker of the Indiana House of Representatives to increase lobbyist disclosure.42 Prosecuting authorities and the Ethics Commission in Ohio continue to examine free trips, meals, lodging and entertainment paid by investment firms to members of public pension fund boards after the guilty plea to criminal ethics charges of one fund trustee. 43 The New Hampshire legislature is reviewing new gift restrictions upon its members, while proposals in the Louisiana legislature look to place tighter limits upon gifts given by lobbyists to the families of public officials.44 While the potential impropriety of what are seen as traditional conflicts of interest such as gifts from contractors and regulatees continues as an ethics issue throughout the states, new questions of the influence of different means of generousity by those doing business with government officials have arisen. Questions involving private sector companies donating to charitable causes backed by public officials as a possible means of exerting influence have surfaced in Florida.45 Insurance companies facing large losses and potential investigations into their practices in that state have been identified as large financial contributors to charities endorsed by executive and legislative branch leaders. While Florida ethics laws prohibit state employees from accepting large gifts, they do not address charitable giving to entities supported or backed by public officials and some see no questions of improper influence. While not resolving the direct issue of donations made by a lobbyist or contractor, ethics commissions in Hawaii, Mississippi and Ohio have addressed issues involving conflicts of interest arising between nonprofits and public officials under their authority.46 Ongoing ethical issues will likely continue related to the application or need for fur-


ETHICS ther conflict of interest restraints involving nonprofits in their interaction with government. Trends in ethics governance, however, are not limited to the examination or enactment of new compliance measures. They include the incorporation of new strategies of deterrence.

Supplementing Compliance with Values Identification One trend in ethics oversight is the addition of values-based dialogue to ethics compliance measures. Ethicists have long challenged adherence to legal compliance measures alone that do not promote values discussions or considerations.47 They argue that ethics restrictions in and of themselves do not reach fundamental motivations and behaviors, nor create incentives for those with self-interest to understand and act in accord with or in advancement of broader public interests. As a result, more educational trainings offered by state boards are incorporating values discussions. Increased attention to values has also led to the endorsement or adoption of model codes of ethical behavior by governors and ethics bodies that present ideal, rather than mandatory, statements of ethical conduct that are designed to compliment ethics laws or regulations.48 The addition of values considerations to compliance understanding appears to be a natural outgrowth of ethics education, but the extent to which governmental institutions are empowered or even capable of addressing core ethical principles will itself likely be a topic of continuing discussion. Interesting for its innovation and attention to ethical action beyond compliance measures, although not the product of one of the enumerated state ethics boards, is an initiative of the Miami-Dade Commission on Ethics and Public Trust. The commission has stepped beyond traditional notions of ethical compliance models and recently adopted a Model Student Ethics Commission program designed to teach and encourage students to apply good governance and ethical standards to their behavior and future actions.49

Additional Resources While comparisons or trend ethics issues may be difficult to readily identify among the states, the author has identified those above, and there are resources for general assistance to those examining these questions in more depth. COGEL conducts annual surveys in the topic areas of ethics, lobbying, campaign finance, public records and electronic filing. COGEL’s membership

includes those responsible for ethics administration in all three branches of government, at the national, state, provincial and local level in the United States and Canada, as well as a growing number of other countries. It also includes professionals, academics and individuals practicing or interested in these areas. The 2003 and 2004 COGEL Blue Book Ethics Update and the 2004 tables have been extensively used here. These surveys summarize the authority and responsibility, as well as advisory, enforcement, litigative and legislative developments, of individual states and other jurisdictions. They are available on searchable CD, and include in the identification of the issue or development those issues that the ethics agency itself classifies as the year’s most significant. Survey updates are available to members at a relatively modest cost through COGEL’s Web site at www.cogel.org. Additional information is available through The Council of State Governments, the National Conference of State Legislatures, and the Ethics Resource Center, a small portion of which has been cited in this article.

Notes 1 The author’s previous ethics article for The Book of States 2004 attempted to wrestle with differences often overlooked or underestimated in identifying “ethics” issues among the states, comparing those subject to oversight, and contrasting remedial processes and their staff and funding. The author continues to recommend that those seeking an accurate assessment of ethics agencies or trend concerns within the states, whether taken from this article or another summary, highlight the specific issue within targeted jurisdictions, and then contact more than one experienced resource to verify assessments within those jurisdictions. While comparisons drawn in this article come largely from summaries prepared by agencies or individual offices charged with ethics oversight, and are often, in the author’s experience, the most accurate, an agency’s description may be limited or their oversight alone may color the perception and description of the issue. For purposes of organizing this summary, the author’s own identification of classifications or trends may also diverge from the manner in which others identify those identical questions. 2 David Freel, “Comparing State Ethics Laws and Ethics Trends and Issues,” The Book of States 2004, (Lexington, KY: The Council of State Governments, 2004). 3 http://ncsl.org/programs/ethics/comprehensive_ list.htm. This comprehensive index does not separately identify the Louisiana Board of Ethics (see http:// www.ethics.state.la.us). It also does not list the Kentucky Executive Branch Ethics Commission (see http:// ethics.ky.gov/) or the Tennessee Ethics Committee (see http://www.state.tn.us/governor/newsroom/releases/Feb03/ 02-03-03%20ethics.htm). 4 Statutes in Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, New Hampshire,

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ETHICS New Mexico, North Dakota, South Dakota, Vermont and Wyoming vary in the breadth of their application to public officials, but are largely overseen by respective offices of secretary of state. (Vermont also subjects ethics oversight of executive branch officials to a cabinet secretary. See http://www.vermont.gov/tools/whatsnew2/index.php? topic=ExecutiveOrders&id=248&v=Article.) Utah and Virginia’s ethics laws are directly regulated by their respective offices of the attorney general. (For reference, as well, a number of other states refer advisory or investigative matters before their ethics boards and commissions to their office of attorney general.) See generally, the COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update published by the Council on Governmental Ethics Laws (COGEL), containing summary charts at the end of this article, and available through www.cogel.org. 5 Montana does not have a board or commission; instead, a single commissioner of political practices, who is subject to Senate confirmation. See http://www.state.mt.us/cpp. 6 The COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update Charts at the end of this article notably do not include information from the South Carolina Ethics Commission (see http:// www.state.sc.us/ethics/), the Tennessee Ethics Committee, referred to above, or the newly reconstituted Illinois Executive Ethics Commission (see http://www.ag.state.il.us/ government/ethics_commission.html). 7 http://search.cga.state.ct.us/dl2004/rpt/doc/2004-R0881.doc. States listed are Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, Washington, West Virginia and Wisconsin. 8 Montana is listed in the Research Report; however, Montana does not have a board or commission, as indicated above. Researchers also noted, but chose not include the Maine Commission on Governmental Ethics and Elections Practice (see http://www.state.me.us/ethics/About.htm) and the Minnesota Campaign Finance and Public Disclosure Board (see http://www.cfboard.state.mn.us/giftban. htm), because their primary responsibilities are campaign finance and lobbying, yet both have ethics-related functions. (In contrast, in this regard, researchers chose to include the Texas Ethics Commission, although its primary responsibility is campaign finance and lobbying. See http:/ /www.ethics.state.tx.us/tec/statdty.htm.) Also not included was the Tennessee Ethics Committee, referred to above. This author’s reference to 38 states then includes those in the Research Report and listed above, plus Maine, Minnesota and Tennessee, but not Montana. For convenience, the author often uses the term “board” to refer to both boards and commissions, although he recognizes that states may define them distinctly. 9 See COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update, Ethics Agency Table on Advisory Opinions, Investigations and Training, at article’s end. 10 See http://www.ct.gov/governorrell/cwp/view.asp? A=1793&Q=284936 and see Frederick M. Herrmann, “Empowering Governmental Ethics Agencies,” Spectrum: The

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Journal of State Government, Summer 2004, Vol. 77, No. 3, 33. 11 Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, California, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Mississippi, Missouri, Nebraska, Nevada, New York, Ohio, Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, Texas, Washington, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. In contrast, in Illinois, Indiana, New Jersey, North Carolina, Tennessee, Vermont and Washington, appointments are made by the governor, without concurrence of the legislature, and membership often includes cabinet members or delegates. 12 See note 2 above, 286. 13 See COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update, Ethics Agency General Information Table at end. 14 See COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update, Ethics Agency General Information Table at end. Note that even the California Political Fair Practices Commission absorbed a $500,000 budget reduction this past year, with reduced staffing resulting, though appropriations are statutorily mandated by the initiative that created the body. See, COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update and note 2 above. 15 See COGEL Blue Book: 2003 and 2004 Ethics Updates. Also see notes 2 and Herrmann, note 10 above. 16 See Herrmann, note 10 above. 17 See COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update and the Connecticut Legislative research at http://search.cga. state.ct.us/dl2004/rpt/doc/2004-R-0881.doc. 18 See http://www.ccec.state.az.us/ccecscr/pub/pdf/ ActRules.pdf at Section 16-955. 19 See http://www.ethics.alalinc.net/news/history.pdf for a description of the 30-year old Alabama Ethics Commission, widespread challenges to its authority, and some humorous insight into its creation, in what was referred to as a “game of chicken” between legislative chambers attempting to outdo one another with the “hope-and full expectation” that ethics reform would be killed by the legislature or governor. 20 See http://www.ethics.alalinc.net/news/history.pdf. 21 See COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update, Ethics Agency Table on Advisory Opinions, Investigations, and Training, at article’s end, and the Connecticut Legislative research at http://search.cga.state.ct.us/dl2004/rpt/doc/ 2004-R-0881.doc. 22 See COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update, and Ethics Agency Table on Advisory Opinions, Investigations, and Training, at article’s end, and the Hawaii Ethics Commission as an example http://www.state.hi.us/ethics/noindex/ newleg.htm. 23 See http://www.ncsl.org/programs/ethics/ethics_ training.htm. 24 See COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update, described above. 25 See http://www.ethics.ohio.gov/AdvisoryOpinion_ Definition.html and State v. Urbin, 100 Ohio St.3d 1207, 2003-Ohio-5549. It is noted, that while the opinion supported both the protection afforded the requester and the viability of Ethics Commission opinions interpreting statute, it also restated the general principle that the courts remain sovereign in the final construction of statute.


ETHICS 26

See note 21 above. See note 2 above. 28 See COGEL Blue Book: 2003 and 2004 Ethics Updates, note 2 above, http://www.csg.org/CSG/StatesNews/ default.htm and http://www.ncsl.org/programs/ethics/. 29 See http://www.ct.gov/governorrell/cwp/view.asp? A=1793&Q=284936, the COGEL Blue Book: 2003 and 2004 Ethics Updates, the Connecticut Legislative research at http://search.cga.state.ct.us/dl2004/rpt/doc/2004-R0881.doc and numerous articles in the New York Times and Connecticut newspapers. 30 http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/ A21937-2004Dec23.html. 31 http://www.state.nj.us/infobank/circular/eoc3.htm. 32 http://www.state.nj.us/lps/ethics. 33 http://www.mass.gov/ethics/fall_04.pdf. 34 “Massachusetts Ethics Panel Hires Consultant,” Boston Globe, December 14, 2004. http://nl.newsbank.com/nlsearch/we/Archives?p_action=list&p_topdoc=11. 35 http://www.ag.state.il.us/government/ethics.html. 36 http://www.governing.com/articles/12priv.htm and http://www.nj.com/statehouse/ledger/index.ssf?/base/news1/1085466863193220.xml. 37 http://www.njchamber.com/media/pay%20to%20play %20ny%20times.htm, http://www.eagleton.rutgers.edu/ NJProject/Reedarticle08_22.html, and Council on Governmental Ethics Laws, Guardian, Fall 2004. 38 http://www.citizen.org/congress/campaign/state_local/ pay_to_play/articles.cfm?ID=10982. 39 http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthsuperior/ news/politics/10476358.htm. 40 http://www.ethics.ohio.gov/opinions/90-006.pdf. 41 http://www.judicialaccountability.org/judgesrules ongifts.htm. 27

42 http://www.indystar.com/articles/4/205299-6864-009. html. 43 COGEL Blue Book: 2004 Ethics Update 44 h t t p : / / w w w. t h e a d v e r t i s e r. c o m / a p p s / p b c s . d l l / article?AID=/20041221/OPINION01/412210309/1014 and http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-lobby7 nov07,0,7940218.story. 45 h t t p : / / w w w. t h e a d v e r t i s e r. c o m / a p p s / p b c s . d l l / article?AID=/20041221/OPINION01/412210309/1014. 46 See http://www.state.hi.us/ethics/noindex/newsltr/ 2004-3.pdf, http://www.ethics.state.ms.us/ethics/ethics.nsf/ webpage/A_news_director?OpenDocument and http:// www.ethics.ohio.gov/PressReleases/12232003.html. 47 h t t p : / / w w w. n c s l . o rg / p ro g r a m s / e t h i c s / e t h i c s _training.htm and http://www.josephsoninstitute.org/seminars/etw_public-administration.htm. 48 http://ethics.ky.gov/Model%20Code%20of%20 Ethics.doc and http://www.ethics.ohio.gov/ModelEthics Code_stateagencies.html. 49 http://www.miamidade.gov/ethics/training.asp.

About the Author David E. Freel has been the executive director of the Ohio Ethics Commission since 1994. Before joining the Ethics Commission staff, he was a faculty member of the Ohio State University College of Law. Freel has written articles on Ohio’s ethics law and given ethics presentations at seminars and conferences in the United States and Canada. He is a past president of the Council on Governmental Ethics Laws (COGEL) and was honored with the COGEL Service Award in 2002.

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Table 6.9 ETHICS AGENCIES: JURISDICTION SUBJECT AREAS

Campaign finance

Conflict of interest

Elections administration

Ethics

Financial disclosure

Freedom of information

Gift restriction

Lobbying

Public records

Subject area

Ethics Comm. Legisltv. Ethics Cmte. Public Ofcs. Comm. Citizens Clean Elections Comm. Ethics Comm. Fair Political Practices Comm.; L.A. Co. Metro. Transit Authority; L.A. Ethics Comm.; Oakland Public Ethics Comm.; San Diego Ethics Comm.; San Francisco Ethics Comm.

Y N Y Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y

N Y N N Y Y Y Y N N Y

Y N N N N N N N Y Y N

N Y N N Y Y Y Y N Y Y

N N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y

Y N N N N N N N Y Y N

Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y

Y N Y N Y Y Y Y N Y Y

Y N Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y N

Denver Bd. of Ethics Freedom of Info. Comm.; State Ethics Comm. Public Integrity Comm. City of Jacksonville; Comm. on Ethics; Elections Comm. State Ethics Comm.

N Y N N Y N Y Y

Y N Y Y Y Y N N

N N N N N N N N

Y N Y Y Y Y N N

N Y Y Y Y Y N Y

N N N N N N N N

Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y

N N Y Y Y Y N Y

N N N N Y N N Y

Campaign Spending Comm.; Honolulu Ethics Comm. State Ethics Comm.; Secretary of State Chicago Bd. of Ethics; City of Champaign Public Access Counselor’s Ofc.; State Ethics Comm. Ethics & Campaign Discl. Bd.

Y N N Y Y Y Y Y Y

N Y Y N Y N N N Y

N N N Y N Y N N N

N Y Y N Y N N N Y

N Y Y N Y Y Y N Y

N N N N Y N N Y N

N Y Y N Y Y Y Y Y

N N Y Y Y N N Y Y

N N N N Y N N N N

Govtl. Ethics Comm. Exec. Branch Ethics Comm.; Legisltv. Ethics Comm. Board of Ethics Ethics Admin. Comm. on Govtl. Ethics & Election Practices House of Representatives Anne Arundel Co. Ethics Comm.; Montgomery Co. Ethics Comm.; State Ethics Comm.

Y N N Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y Y N

N N N N N Y

Y Y Y Y Y N

Y Y Y Y Y N

N N N N N Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y

N N N N N Y

Y N N N

N Y Y Y

Y N N N

N Y Y Y

N Y Y Y

Y N Y Y

Y Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y

Y N Y Y

Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Ethics Comm. Dept. of State State Bd. of Ethics Camp. Finance & Public Discl. Bd. Ethics Comm. Ethics Comm.

N Y N Y Y Y

Y N N Y N Y

N Y N N N N

Y N Y N N N

Y Y N Y N Y

N Y N N N N

Y Y N Y Y Y

N Y N Y N Y

N Y N N N Y

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

Commr. of Political Practices Y N N Y Y N N Y N Accountability & Discl. Comm. Y Y N Y Y N Y Y N Comm. on Ethics N Y N Y Y N Y N N ------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ------------------------------------------------------------------------Exec. Comm. on Ethical Stds. N Y N Y Y N N N N

New Mexico ........................

Sec. of State, Bureau of Elections and Ethics Administration Buffalo Bd. of Ethics; Dept. of State Cmte. on Open Govt.; NYC Conflicts of Interest Bd.; State Ethics Comm.; Suffolk Co. Camp. Finance Bd.; Temp. State Comm. on Lobbying Bd. of Ethics

State or other jurisdiction Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................ Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa ..................................... Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan .............................

New York .............................

North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Agency

Ethics Comm.; Legisltv. Insp. Gen. Ofc.

See footnotes at end of table.

374

The Book of the States 2005

Y

Y

N

Y

Y

N

Y

Y

Y

Y Y N N Y N N Y N N

N N Y Y N N Y N Y Y

Y N N N N N N Y N N

N N Y Y N N Y N Y Y

N Y Y Y N N Y N Y Y

Y N N N N N N N N N

Y Y Y Y N Y N N Y Y

Y N N N N Y N Y Y Y

N N N N N Y N N N N


ETHICS

ETHICS AGENCIES: JURISDICTION SUBJECT AREAS — Continued

State or other jurisdiction

Agency

Campaign finance

Conflict of interest

Elections administration

Ethics

Financial disclosure

Freedom of information

Gift restriction

Lobbying

Public records

Subject area

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Ethics Comm. Govt. Standards & Practices Comm. Ethics Comm. Ethics Comm. House Legisltv. Ethics Cmte.

Y N N N Y

Y Y Y Y N

Y N N N Y

Y Y Y Y N

Y Y Y Y N

Y N N N Y

Y Y N Y Y

Y Y N N Y

Y N N N N

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas ....................................

------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ------------------------------------------------------------------------Ethics Comm.; Y N Y N N Y Y Y Y San Antonio City Attorney’s Ofc. Y Y N Y Y Y Y Y Y State Elections Ofc. Y N N Y N N Y Y Y ------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. -------------------------------------------------------------------------

Utah ..................................... Vermont .............................. Virginia ............................... Washington .........................

West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

State Bd. of Elections Y N N Y N N Y Y N King Co. Bd. of Ethics; N Y N Y Y N Y N N King Co. Ofc. of Citizen Complaints; Y N Y N Y Y Y N N State Comm. on Judcial Conduct; Y Y N N N Y Y N N State Exec. Ethics Bd.; Y N Y N N Y Y N N State Legisltv. Ethics Bd.; N Y N Y N N Y N Y State Public Discl. Comm. Y N N N Y N N Y N Ethics Comm. N Y N Y Y N Y Y N Ethics Bd. N Y N Y Y N Y Y N ------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. -------------------------------------------------------------------------

Guam ................................... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

Ethics Comm. Ofc. of Govt. Ethics Dept. of Justice

Y N Y

N Y N

N N N

N Y N

N Y N

N N N

Y Y Y

N N N

N N N

Source: The Council on Governmental Ethics Laws, 2004 Ethics Update. Key: Y—Yes N—No N.A.—Not available.

The Council of State Governments

375


ETHICS

Table 6.10 ETHICS AGENCIES: JURISDICTION Legislative employees

Legislators

Lobbyists

Local appointed officials

Local elected officials

Private sector/vendors

State appointed officials

State elected officials

State employees

State colleges & universities

Alabama .............................. Alaska ..................................

Y N Y N Y Y N Y N N N

Y N Y N Y Y N N N N N

Y N N N Y Y N Y N N N

N N Y N Y Y N Y N N N

Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y N N N

Y N Y N Y Y Y Y N N Y

Y N Y N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y

Y N Y Y Y Y Y Y N N Y

Y N Y N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y

Y N Y Y N N Y Y Y Y Y

Y N Y N Y Y N N N N N

N N N Y Y Y N N N N N

Y N N N Y Y N N Y Y N

Y N Y N Y Y N N N N N

Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Colorado ............................. Connecticut .........................

Denver Bd. of Ethics Freedom of Info. Comm.; State Ethics Comm. Public Integrity Comm. City of Jacksonville; Comm. on Ethics; Elections Comm. State Ethics Comm.

N Y Y Y Y Y N N

N Y N Y N N N Y

N Y Y Y N Y N N

N Y Y Y Y Y N N

N Y Y Y N Y N Y

N Y Y Y Y Y N Y

Y Y N Y Y Y N N

Y Y N Y Y Y Y Y

Y Y N Y Y Y N N

N Y Y N Y N N Y

N Y Y Y N Y N Y

N N Y Y N Y N Y

N Y Y Y N Y Y N

N Y Y Y N Y N N

Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................ Hawaii .................................

Campaign Spending Comm.; Honolulu Ethics Comm.; State Ethics Comm.; Secretary of State Chicago Bd. of Ethics; City of Champaign Public Access Counselor’s Ofc.; State Ethics Comm. Ethics & Campaign Discl. Bd.

N Y Y N Y N Y N Y

N N Y Y N N Y N N

N N Y N N N Y N N

N Y Y N Y N Y Y N

Y N Y Y N N Y N N

N N Y Y Y N Y Y Y

N Y N N Y Y Y N N

Y Y N N Y N Y N N

N Y N N Y N Y N N

Y N N N Y Y Y Y Y

N N Y N N N Y N N

Y N Y N N N N N Y

N N Y Y Y N Y N Y

N N Y N N N Y N Y

Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa ..................................... Kansas ................................. Kentucky .............................

Govtl. Ethics Comm. Exec. Branch Ethics Comm.; Legisltv. Ethics Comm. Ethics Admin. Comm. on Govtl. Ethics & Election Practices; House of Representatives Anne Arundel Co. Ethics Comm.; Montgomery Co. Ethics Comm.; State Ethics Comm.

Y Y N Y N

Y N N N Y

Y N N Y Y

Y N N Y N

Y N Y Y N

Y Y Y Y N

N N N Y Y

Y N N Y N

N N N Y N

Y Y N Y Y

Y Y N Y Y

Y Y N Y N

Y Y N Y N

Y N N Y N

Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

N Y Y Y

Y N N N

N N N Y

N Y Y N

N Y N N

N Y Y Y

N Y Y N

N Y Y N

N Y Y N

Y N N Y

N N N Y

N N N Y

N N N Y

N N N Y

Massachusetts .................... Michigan .............................

Ethics Comm. Dept. of State; State Bd. of Ethics Camp. Finance & Public Discl. Bd. Ethics Comm. Ethics Comm.

Y N Y Y N Y

Y Y N Y N Y

Y N N N N Y

Y N N N N N

Y Y N Y N Y

Y Y N Y N Y

Y Y N Y N Y

Y N Y Y N Y

Y N N Y N Y

Y Y N N Y N

Y Y Y N N Y

Y Y Y N N Y

Y N N N N Y

Y Y N N N Y

Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Local employees

Judicial employees

Ethics Comm. Legisltv. Ethics Cmte.; Public Ofcs. Comm. Citizens Clean Elections Comm. Ethics Comm. Fair Political Practices Comm.; L.A. Co. Metro. Transit Authority; L.A. Ethics Comm.; Oakland Public Ethics Comm.; San Diego Ethics Comm.; San Francisco Ethics Comm.

State or other jurisdiction

Judges

Agency

Executive branch employees

Jurisdiction over

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

Commr. of Political Practices Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y N N N Y Y N Accountability & Discl. Comm. Y N N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Comm. on Ethics Y N N Y Y N Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y ------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ------------------------------------------------------------------------Exec. Comm. on Ethical Stds. Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N

New Mexico ........................

Secretary of State, Bureau of Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N N N Y N N N Elections and Ethics Admin. Buffalo Bd. of Ethics; N N N N N N Y N Y Y N N Y N Dept. of State Cmte. on Open Govt.; Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y Y N N Y Y NYC Conflicts of Interest Bd.; N N N N N N Y Y Y N N N N N State Ethics Comm.; Y N N N N N N N N N Y Y Y Y Suffolk Co. Camp. Finance Bd.; N N N N Y N N Y N N N N N N Temp. State Comm. on Lobbying N N N N Y N N N N Y N N N N Bd. of Ethics Y N N N N N N N N N N N N N ------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ------------------------------------------------------------------------Ethics Comm.; Y N N N N N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Legisltv. Insp. Gen. Ofc. N N N Y Y Y N N N N N N N N

New York .............................

North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio ..................................... See footnotes at end of table.

376

The Book of the States 2005


ETHICS

ETHICS AGENCIES: JURISDICTION — Continued

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont Virginia ............................... Washington .........................

West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming ............................. Guam ................................... Puerto Rico ......................... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

State employees

State colleges & universities

Y Y Y Y N

State elected officials

N Y Y Y N

Private sector/vendors

N Y Y Y N

State appointed officials

Y Y N N N

Local employees

Y Y Y Y N

Local elected officials

N Y Y Y N

Lobbyists

Y Y N Y N

Local appointed officials

Y Y N Y N

Legislative employees

Y Y Y Y N

Legislators

Agency

Ethics Comm. Govt. Standards & Practices Comm. Ethics Comm. Ethics Comm. House Legisltv. Ethics Cmte.

Judicial employees

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Judges

State or other jurisdiction

Executive branch employees

Jurisdiction over

Y Y N N Y

Y Y Y Y N

N Y Y Y N

Y Y Y Y N

Y Y Y Y N

------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ------------------------------------------------------------------------Ethics Comm.; Y Y Y N Y Y N N N Y Y N N Y San Antonio City Attorney’s Ofc. N N N N N Y Y Y Y N N N N N State Elections Ofc. N Y Y Y Y Y N N N Y Y N N N State Bd. of Elections N Y N N Y N Y N N Y N N N N Seattle Ethics & Elections Comm.; N N Y N N N N Y Y Y N N N N King Co. Bd. of Ethics; Y N N Y N N Y Y N Y N N N N King Co. Ofc. of Citizen Complaints; N N Y Y N N Y N Y Y N N Y N State Comm. on Judcial Conduct; N Y Y N N N N Y N N Y N N N State Exec. Ethics Bd.; Y N N N Y N N N N Y N N N Y State Legisltv. Ethics Bd.; N N N Y Y N N N N N N N N N State Public Discl. Comm. N Y N N Y Y N Y Y N Y Y N Y Ethics Comm. Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Ethics Bd. Y Y N N Y Y N N N N Y Y N Y ------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ------------------------------------------------------------------------Ethics Comm. Ofc. of Govt. Ethics Dept. of Justice

N Y N

N N N

N N N

N N N

N N N

N N N

N Y N

N Y N

N Y N

Y N Y

N Y N

N Y N

N Y N

N Y N

Source: The Council on Governmental Ethics Laws, 2004 Ethics Update. Key: Y—Yes N—No N.A.—Not available.

The Council of State Governments

377


378

The Book of the States 2005

Denver Bd. of Ethics Freedom of Info. Comm.; State Ethics Comm. Public Integrity Comm. City of Jacksonville; Comm. on Ethics; Elections Comm. State Ethics Comm.

Camp. Spending Comm.; Honolulu Ethics Comm.; State Ethics Comm. Secretary of State Chicago Bd. of Ethics Public Access Counselor’s Ofc.; State Ethics Comm. Ethics & Camp. Discl. Bd.

Govtl. Ethics Comm. Exec. Branch Ethics Comm.; Legisltv. Ethics Comm. Board of Ethics; Ethics Admin. Comm. on Govtl. Ethics & Election Practices; House of Representatives Montgomery Co. Ethics Comm.; State Ethics Comm.

Hawaii ............................

Kansas ........................... Kentucky .......................

See footnotes at end of table.

Maryland .......................

Maine .............................

Louisiana .......................

Iowa ...............................

Idaho .............................. Illinois ............................ Indiana ...........................

Georgia ..........................

Delaware ........................ Florida ...........................

Arizona .......................... Arkansas ........................ California ......................

Colorado ........................ Connecticut ...................

Agency

State Ethics Comm. Legisltv. Ethics Cmte.; Public Ofcs. Comm. Citizens Clean Elections Comm. Ethics Comm. Fair Political Practices Comm.; L.A. Co. Metro. Trans. Authority; L.A. Ethics Comm.; Oakland Public Ethics Comm.; San Diego Ethics Comm.; San Francisco Ethics Comm.

Alabama ........................ Alaska ............................

State or other jurisdiction

Y Y Y N N Y Y Y Y

Y Y Y

Y N Y N N N N N

N Y Y N N Y N N

N Y Y N N Y N N N N N

Y Y Y Y Y Y

Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y

Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y

Authority Binding on to issue inquirer

<6 10+ 10

25–30 50 5 N.A. 390 <6

12 5–10 1–5 ... 30 64 5 10

50 700 30 60 N.A. 23 (b) ... 1

48 3–5 5–25 ... 7 300–400 150 N.A. 1–2 4 N.A.

Estimated number per year

Advisory opinions Authority to investigate

Investigations

Y Y Y

Y Y N Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y Y N Y Y

N Y Y Y Y N N Y

N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y

Y Y Y

Y Y N N Y Y

Y N N Y Y Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y N Y N N

Y N Y Y N N N Y Y Y N

Y Y Y

Y Y N N Y Y

Y Y Y Y N Y Y Y

N Y Y Y N N N N

Y Y N N N Y Y Y Y Y Y

On own Anonymous initiative Reimbursement complaints

Table 6.11 ETHICS AGENCIES: ADVISORY OPINIONS, INVESTIGATIONS & TRAINING

Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N

Y Y Y Y N Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y

<10 4 N.A.

3–5 28 5–7 N.A. 113 <10

20 20–30 10–20 5 (c) 25 N.A. 50 10

15 (a) N.A. 75 3–7 N.A. 107 (b) 300 (i) 100

329 4–6 5–10 22 112 892 150 150 30–40 38 38

Estimated Respond to number complaint per year

Y N Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y

Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y

Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y Y

R O R

O O B N.A. N.A. R

N.A. B B ... B O O N.A.

R O B O R O ... O

O O O R O B R B B R O

Agency Optional or trains required

(d) N.A. 15

35–40 27 2 N.A. 60 (d)

5 30 30–60 ... 60 29 35 5

5,000 70 35 15–20 10 30 ... 44

C,T,V,VT,CD,W W C

C C C, VT ... C ...

C, T C, VT C, V C, T, V, VT, CD, W C, VT, W C, T, V, VT, CD, W C,T,V,VT,CD,W C,W

... C, T, V, VT, CD, W ... C, VT C, T, VT, W C, W ... C

56 ... 2 C 20–May C, T, V, VT, CD, W 30 C, CD, W 13 C 73 C 52+ C 35–40 ... 4 ... N.A. C, T, V, VT, CD, W 20 ...

Estimated number per year Training methods

Training

ETHICS


Y N N N Y N Y N N N Y Y Y N N Y N Y 60 (f) N.A. 0 2 N.A. 180 Y Y N N N Y B O N N N N.A.

65 (f) 6 N ... ... 25

C,CD ... ... ... ... ...

Ethics Comm. Y N 5–7 Y Y Y N over 10 Y O over 10 C,W Govt. Standards & Practices Comm. Y Y 40–50 Y N N Y 50–100 Y O 50–60 C Ethics Comm. Y N 125–200 Y Y N Y 100 Y O 50 C, VT Ethics Comm. Y N 120 Y Y N Y 30 Y O 25 C, W House Legisltv. Ethics Cmte. Y Y 2 N Y Y Y 3 Y N.A. 1 ... ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Ethics Comm.; Y Y 10 Y Y Y Y 76 Y B 37 ... San Antonio City Attorney’s Ofc. Y N 20 Y N Y Y 1–3 Y B 30 C State Elections Ofc. Y N 3 Y Y Y N 3 N N.A. N.A. C, T, V, VT, CD, W Ofc. of the Treasurer ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ N.A. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

See footnotes at end of table.

Utah ............................... North Dakota ................

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ........................... Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina .............. South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas ..............................

North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ...............................

Y N Y Y N Y

Secretary of State, Bureau of N N N.A. Y N N Y 20 Y N.A 3 C,VT,W Elections and Ethics Administration Buffalo Bd. of Ethics; Y N 0 Y Y Y Y 1–2 N ... 0 ... Dept. of State Cmte. on Open Govt.; Y N 800 (h) N Y Y Y N.A. Y N.A. 50 C, T, V, VT, CD, W NYC Conflicts of Interest Bd.; Y Y 535 (g) Y Y Y Y 62 (g) Y O (j) C,VT,W State Ethics Comm.; Y Y 5–10 Y N Y Y 60+ Y O 65 C, VT, W Suffolk Co. Camp. Finance Bd.; Y N 0 Y Y Y Y 0 N O 2 N.A. Temp. State Comm. on Lobbying; Y Y 5 Y N N Y 10 Y N.A. 6 C, T,W Bd. of Ethics Y N 10–15 Y N N Y 5–10 Y O 100+ ... ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Ethics Comm.; Y Y 145 Y Y Y Y 87 Y B 158 C Legisltv. Insp. Gen. Ofc. Y N N.A. Y N Y Y 5 Y N.A. 3 C

8 (e) N.A. 2 10 N.A. 15

New Mexico ...................

New York .......................

Y N N N N N

Estimated number per year Training methods

Commr. of Political Practices Y N 50 N N N Y 15–20 Y O 2 C Accountability & Discl. Comm. Y N 9 Y Y N Y 30 Y O 8 C Comm. on Ethics Y Y 20 Y N N Y 100 Y O 25 C,VT,CD ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Exec. Comm. on Ethical Stds. Y N 20 Y N Y Y 35 Y B 15 C, CD,W

Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

Y N Y Y N Y

Agency Optional or trains required

Training

Montana ........................ Nebraska ........................ Nevada ........................... New Hampshire ............ New Jersey .....................

Agency

On own Anonymous initiative Reimbursement complaints

Estimated Respond to number complaint per year

State Ethics Comm. Dept. of State; State Bd. of Ethics Camp. Finance & Public Discl. Bd. Ethics Comm. Ethics Comm.

Authority Binding on to issue inquirer

Authority to investigate

Investigations

Massachusetts ............... Michigan ........................

State or other jurisdiction

Estimated number per year

Advisory opinions

ETHICS AGENCIES: ADVISORY OPINIONS, INVESTIGATIONS & TRAINING — Continued

ETHICS

The Council of State Governments

379


380 Estimated number per year Training methods

The Book of the States 2005 N Y N

Source: The Council on Governmental Ethics Laws, Ethics Update 2004. Key: Y—Yes N—No B—Both O—Optional R- Required N.A.—Not available C—Classroom T—Teleconference V—Videoconference VT—Video tape

West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming ....................... N Y N ... 1,738 N.A. N Y N Y Y Y N Y N

CD—CDRom W—Web-based (a) In 2002. (b) Three year average. (c) In elections years. (d) One biennially for new Legislature. (e) Formal advisory opinions. (f) In Fiscal Year 2004. (g) In 2003. (h) Written opinions. (i) Estimated. (j) 182 in 2001 and 377 in 2003.

Y Y Y

N.A. 500 N.A.

N Y N

... R ...

... 400 ...

... C,T,V,VT,CD ...

Ethics Comm. Ofc. of Govt. Ethics Dept. of Justice

Agency Optional or trains required

Training

Guam ............................. Puerto Rico .................... U.S. Virgin Islands ........

Agency

On own Anonymous initiative Reimbursement complaints

Estimated Respond to number complaint per year

State Bd. of Elections N N ... N Y Y N N.A. Y O 1-2 dozen C, T, V, VT, CD, W Seattle Ethics & Elections Comm.; Y Y 30 Y Y Y Y 75 Y O 25 C King Co. Bd. of Ethics; Y N Varies Y N Y Y Varies Y B 64 (g) C King Co. Ofc. Of Citizen Complaints; N N ... Y Y Y Y 10-20 Y N.A. 3-5 C, T, V, VT, CD, W State Comm. on Judicial Conduct; N N ... Y Y Y Y 360 N O 4 C, T, V, VT, CD, W State Exec. Ethics Bd.; Y N 10 Y Y Y Y 100 Y O 40 ... State Legisltv. Ethics Bd.; Y N 8 Y Y N Y 5-12 Y B 3–10 ... State Public Discl. Comm. Y Y 0-2 Y Y N Y 50-75 Y O 59 ... Ethics Comm. Y N 35-40 N Y N Y 10-15 Y O 15–20 C State Ethics Bd. Y N 40 Y Y Y Y 10 Y R 25 C ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Authority Binding on to issue inquirer

Investigations Authority to investigate

Virginia .......................... Washington ....................

State or other jurisdiction

Estimated number per year

Advisory opinions

ETHICS AGENCIES: ADVISORY OPINIONS, INVESTIGATIONS & TRAINING — Continued

ETHICS


See footnotes at end of table.

Y N Y N Y N Y N

Y N N N

N N N Y

Y Y Y N

Y N N Y

Y N Y Y Y

Y Y Y N

Y N N Y

Y N Y Y Y

N Y N Y N N N N Y

Y Y Y N

N N N Y

Y Y N N N

N Y N N N N N N Y

Y Y Y N

N N N Y

Y Y N Y N

N Y N Y N N N Y Y

(b)(y)

(b)(w) (rr)

(oo) (e)(qq)

(a)(cc)

(a)(v) (ll) (c)(l)

4,711 10,000 1,300 N.A.

<450 200+ 1,400 11,000

6,000 1,300 150 7,339 <450

N.A. 2,000 575 3,000 (mm) 12,000 N.A. N.A. 400+ 600

N Y Y N

N N N N

N N N Y N

N Y N Y N N N Y Y

Y Y N N

N Y Y Y

Y N Y Y N

Y Y Y Y Y N N Y Y

N Y N Y

Y Y N N

N Y N Y Y

Y N N Y N Y Y Y Y

Y Y N N

N Y Y Y

Y Y Y Y N

Y Y Y N Y N N Y Y

N N N N

N N Y N

N N N N N

N N N N N N N Y N

State Ethics Comm. Dept. of State Camp. Finance & Public Discl. Bd. Ethics Comm.

N Y Y Y

N Y Y Y

N N N N N

N Y N N N N N N Y

Massachusetts .............. Michigan ....................... Minnesota ..................... Mississippi ....................

Maryland ......................

Louisiana ...................... Maine .............................

Y Y N N N

Y Y N N N

N N N N N N N N N

N N N N N N N N N N

Govtl. Ethics Comm. Exec. Branch Ethics Comm.; Legisltv. Ethics Comm. Ethics Admn. Comm. on Govtl. Ethics & Election Practices House of Representatives Anne Arundel Co. Ethics Comm.; Montgomery Co. Ethics Comm.; State Ethics Comm.

N Y Y N Y N N N Y

N Y Y Y Y Y Y N N Y

Reviews or audits available electronically

Kansas ........................... Kentucky .......................

Iowa ...............................

Indiana ..........................

Idaho .............................. Illinois ............................

N Y Y N Y N N Y Y

Y N Y N N Y N Y Y N

FDS Reviews available or audits electronically conducted

Campaign Spending Comm.; State Ethics Comm.; Honolulu Ethics Comm. Secretary of State Chicago Bd. of Ethics; City of Champaign Public Access Counselor’s Ofc.; State Ethics Comm. Ethics & Camp. Discl. Bd.

N Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N

File other electronic

Hawaii ...........................

Georgia ..........................

Delaware ....................... Florida ...........................

N N Y N N N N Y Y N

File via web

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Freedom of Info. Comm.; N N N N N N N.A. N N Y N N State Ethics Comm. Y Y N Y N Y N (i) 1,500 N Y Y Y N Public Integrity Comm. Y N Y Y Y Y Y (j) 300+ N Y N Y N City of Jacksonville; Y Y N N N N N 100 N N N N N Comm. on Ethics Y N Y Y N Y N (k) 30,000 N N N N N State Ethics Comm. Y Y N Y Y Y Y (a)(u) 7,000 Y Y N Y N

Number filed per year

Y Y N Y Y Y Y (a)(h) 30,946 Y Y N Y Y Y Y 2,000 N N N Y Y Y Y (z) 6 ----------------------------------------------- (f) -------------------------------------------------240 (f) Y Y Y Y Y Y Y (a) 21,000 Y Y N N N N N (pp) 1,200 Y Y N Y Y N N (c)(aa) 6,000 Y Y N N N N N (c)(bb) 750 Y Y N N N N N (c) 350 Y Y N N N N N (gg)(kk) 650

State Candidates for elected statewide officials office Other

Colorado ....................... Connecticut ...................

Agency

Candidates for legislature

Ethics Comm. Public Ofcs. Comm. Citizens Clean Elections Comm. Ethics Comm. Fair Political Practices Comm.; L.A. Co. Metro. Trans. Authority; L.A. Ethics Comm.; Oakland Public Ethics Comm.; San Diego Ethics Comm.; San Francisco Ethics Comm.

Agency heads

Alabama ........................ Alaska ............................ Arizona .......................... Arkansas ....................... California ......................

State or other jurisdiction

Board or commission members Judges Legislators

Who must file with agency

Table 6.12 ETHICS AGENCIES: PERSONAL FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE STATEMENTS

ETHICS

The Council of State Governments

381


382

The Book of the States 2005

See footnotes at end of table.

West Virginia ................ Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming ....................... Guam ............................. Puerto Rico ................... U.S. Virgin Islands .......

Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N Y Y Y Y N

(b)(ff) 6,000 (b)(d)(uu) 4,200 (a)(hh) 150,000 (c) 6,500 800

9,500

N N Y N Y

N

Y N Y N Y

N

N N N N N

N

Y N Y N Y

N

N N N N N

N

State Bd. of Elections N N N N N N N N.A. N N Y N N Seattle Ethics & Elections Comm.; Y Y Y N N N N (c)(xx) 1,964 Y Y N Y N King Co. Bd. of Ethics; Y Y N N N N N (b)(t) apx. 2,400 N N N Y N King Co. Ofc. of Citizen Complaints; N N N N N N N N.A. Y Y N N N State Exec. Ethics Bd.; N N N N N N N N.A. N N Y N N State Legisltv. Ethics Bd.; N N N N N N N (g) N.A. N N N N N State Public Discl. Bd. Y Y Y Y Y Y Y (a) 6,500-8,500 N Y N Y Y Ethics Comm. Y Y Y Y Y Y Y (b) 2,600 N N N N N Ethics Bd. Y Y Y Y Y Y Y (ww) 2,400 N Y N Y N -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Ethics Comm. N N N N N N N N.A. N N Y N N Ethics Comm. Y Y Y Y N Y N (d)(nn) 10,600 N Y Y Y N Dept. of Justice N N N N N N N N.A. N N Y N N

Y Y Y Y Y

(a)(m)

Virginia ......................... Washington ...................

Utah ............................... Vermont ........................

Y Y N Y N

Y

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Ethics Comm.; Y Y N Y Y Y Y (ii) 2,500 Y Y N N N San Antonio City Attorney’s Ofc. Y Y Y N N N N (c)(vv) 700 N N N N N State Elections Ofc. N N N Y Y Y Y (jj) 3,500 Y Y Y Y N Ofc. of the Treasurer N N N N N N N N.A. Y Y N N N

Y Y Y Y N

Y

South Dakota ................ Tennessee ...................... Texas ..............................

Y Y Y Y N

Y

Ethics Comm. Govt. Standards & Practices Comm. Ethics Comm. Ethics Comm. House Legisltv. Ethics Cmte.

Y

Oklahoma ..................... Oregon ........................... Pennsylvania ................ Rhode Island ................ South Carolina .............

North Carolina ............. North Dakota ............... Ohio ...............................

New York .......................

N

Reviews or audits available electronically

Secretary of State, Bureau of Elections Y Y Y Y Y Y Y N.A Y N N N N and Ethics Administration Buffalo Bd. of Ethics; Y Y N N N N N 550 Y Y N Y N Dept. of State Cmte. on Open Govt.; N N N N N N N N.A. N N N N N NYC Conflicts of Interest Bd.; Y Y N N N N N (c)(dd) 8,000 N Y N Y N State Ethics Comm.; Y Y N N N Y Y (p) 18,000 N Y N Y N Temp. State Comm. on Lobbying; N N N N N N N (ee) apx. 20,000 Y Y N Y N Suffolk Co. Camp. Finance Bd. N N N Y Y N N (b)(tt) 200 N N Y N N Bd. of Ethics Y Y N N N N N (q) 2500+ N Y N Y N -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Ethics Comm.; Y Y N N N Y Y (a)(r) 10,500 N Y N Y N Legisltv. Insp. Gen. Ofc. N N N Y Y N N (s) 343 Y Y N Y N

Y

File other electronic

FDS Reviews available or audits electronically conducted

New Mexico ..................

Y

File via web

Ethics Comm.

Number filed per year

Commr. of Political Practices Y N N Y Y Y N 190 N N N N N Accountability & Discl. Comm. Y Y N Y Y Y Y (a)(n) 2,500 N N N N N Comm. on Ethics Y Y N N N N N (a)(ss) 300 N N N N N -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- N.A-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Exec. Comm. on Ethical Stds. Y Y N N N N N (o) 2,000 N Y N Y N

Agency heads

State Candidates for elected statewide officials office Other

Missouri ........................

Agency

Candidates for legislature

Montana ........................ Nebraska ....................... Nevada ........................... New Hampshire ............ New Jersey ....................

State or other jurisdiction

Board or commission members Judges Legislators

Who must file with agency

ETHICS AGENCIES: PERSONAL FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE STATEMENTS—Continued

ETHICS


Source: The Council on Governmental Ethics Laws, 2004 Ethics Update. Key: Y—Yes N—No N.A—Not available (a) City and county elected officials and candidates. (b) County elected officials and candidates. (c) City elected officials and candidates. (d) City elected officials. (e) City and county office candidates. (f) Disclosures are filed with Secretary of State. Ballot and legislative question committees make their fillings with the commission. (g) Financial statements to be filed with Public Disclosure Commission, not ethics board. (h) Certain other employees. (i) Senior employees; Quasi-Public Agency members and senior employees. (j) Division directors and their equivalents. (k) Local officers and employees file with the supervisor of elections of the county in which they reside. Candidates file with the officer before whom they qualify. (l) Aldermen must file with the city clerk. All city employees whose annual compensation rate is at or above an amount specified by the Board each year must file with the Board. (m) Some political subdivisions have established their own method of disclosing conflicts of interest and therefore their candidates for office are not required to file the disclosure statement. (n) City elected officials and candidates for same file if city falls within a certain population category. Members of certain boards file if duties fall within statutory criteria. (o) Executive branch employees from assistant division director up; casino and gaming employees. (p) Certain political party chairs, candidates for statewide elected office. (q) High level appointees and employees in the executive branch of state government, including gubernatorial appointees to non-advisory boards/commissions. By invitation, employees and appointees as designated by the nine elected heads of the Council of State agencies, the Board of Governors of the 16-campus University system, the president pro tempore of the Senate and the Speaker of the House of Representatives. (r) School board treasurers, superintendents and business managers. High-ranking state employees. Public university and college presidents must file. (s) High ranking legislative employees are also required to file. Also accept filings by other legislative employees as “voluntary filers.” (t) Local officials, candidates. (u) State Board & Authority members, not Commission members. Do not file directly with agency; reports are filed with filing offices. (v) City and county appointed officers and employees. (w) County employees. (y) Designated state and county employees in policy-making positions. (z) Persons making independent expenditures exceeding $550. (aa) Other employees designated in the agency Conflict of Interest Code.

(bb) Filings made with the city clerk. (cc) Any state employee designated by an agency head who is in a major policy making position, responsible for contracting, purchasing or procurement, responsible for writing or drafting specifications for contracts, responsible for awarding grants, benefits or subsidies, or responsible for inspecting, licensing or regulating any person or entity. (dd) Deputy and assistant agency heads, managers, annual salary over $83,500; employees involved in negotiating, authorizing or approving contracts, leases, franchises, revocable consents or land use applications; compensated board and commission members. Pursuant to legislative change, effective Jan. 1, 2004, salary threshold will be eliminated as a criterion for filing, replaced by “policymakers,” and low level managers will no longer be required to file. (ee) Lobbyists and clients. (ff) Employees of state educational institutions who make policy or spending decisions. (gg) City and county elected officials. (hh) Disclosure requirements also apply to many local and state employees. (ii) State political chairs. (jj) Political action committees, political issues committees, political parties, corporations. (kk) Employees who are designated in the Campaign and Governmental Conduct Code file Statements of Economic Interests with their department heads. (ll) This is campaign disclosure, not personal financial disclosure. Reports are scanned upon receipt and available for viewing on the internet. The information is also entered into a database and available to review/search on the Internet. Desk audits are made on each report. (mm) In an election year. (nn) High level position public servants, purchase officials bid board members and public (government owned) Corporations Board. (oo) Major management personnel of Legislative Research Commission. (pp) Board members and employees who make financial decisions including persons who participate or procurement source selection teams and consultants. (qq) Lobbyists, in accordance with La R.S. 24:50 et seq. (rr) All state employees who are determined by the State Ethics Commission to be “public officials” or who have procurement responsibilities for contracts in excess of $10,000 per year must file financial disclosure statements. (ss) The 2003 Legislature passed significant changes to the financial disclosure statutes. The changes include: the secretary of state is now responsible for accepting financial disclosure statement filings of elected public officers and candidates; the annual filing date is now Jan. 15; creation of a new sections within the Ethics in Government Law regarding new filing requirements for both appointed and elected public officers. (tt) Political committees (including PACs) which support candidates for non-judicial county elected offices. (uu) City and county chief executive officers; designated state agency directors and superintendents and business managers of pubic school districts. (vv) Executive level employees also file financial disclosure, e.g. the city manager and the assistant city managers; assistant department heads; members of police and fire departments involved in procurements; the city clerk; all executive secretaries. Also, “specified employees,” i.e. higher-level employees who are not on executive staff file a shorter financial disclosure form reporting gifts. (ww) Key administrators of state agencies, including the technical college and university systems. (xx) City employees that fit criteria for filing.

ETHICS AGENCIES: PERSONAL FINANCIAL DISCLOSURE STATEMENTS — Continued

ETHICS

The Council of State Governments

383


LOBBYING

Table 6.13 LOBBYISTS: DEFINITIONS AND PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES

Compensation standard

Expenditure standard

Time standard

Making campaign contributions at any time

Making campaign contributions during legislative sessions

Making expenditures in excess of $ per official per year

Solicitation by officials or employees for contributions or gifts

Contingent compensation

Other

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... (ee) ★ ★ ...

★ (ee) ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (x) ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... $100 $10 ... $10/mo.

★ ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ (bb) (z) (a)

Colorado ........................ Connecticut .................... Delaware ........................ Florida ............................ Georgia ...........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ... ... ★

... $50 ... $100 (dd) ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ (b)

... (d) ★ ... ...

Hawaii ............................ Idaho ............................... Illinois ............................. Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

... ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ★

... ... ... ... ★

... ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ... (ff) ...

Kansas ............................ Kentucky ........................ Louisiana ....................... Maine .............................. Maryland .......................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ (j) ... (m) ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

★ (c) . . . $100 (e) ★ (k) . . . ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ... ... (n)

Massachusetts ............... Michigan (f) ................... Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

... (d) ... ... ...

★ (d) ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... (o) ... ... (p)

Montana ......................... Nebraska ........................ Nevada ............................ New Hampshire ............. New Jersey .....................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ (g) ... ...

... ... ... ...

... ★ (q) ★ ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

New Mexico ................... New York ........................ North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... (r) ... ★

... ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ... ...

... $75 ... ... $75

... ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ... ... (t)

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ............................ Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

(y) ... ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ...

... ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

$300 $100 (u) ... ... $0

★ (h) ... ... ... ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ...

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas ............................... Utah ................................ Vermont .........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... (v) ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

... ... ★ ★ ★

(cc) ... (w) (aa) ...

Virginia .......................... Washington .................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ....................... Wyoming ........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

(i) ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ... $25 $0 ...

★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ (l) ... (s)

Dist. of Columbia ..........

...

...

...

...

$100

...

...

...

See footnotes at end of table.

384

The Book of the States 2005

Public employees as lobbyists

Alabama ......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ........................... Arkansas ........................ California .......................

State or other jurisdiction

Elective officials as lobbyists

Administrative agency lobbying

Prohibited activities involving lobbyists

Legislative lobbying

Definition of a lobbyist includes


LOBBYING

LOBBYISTS: DEFINITIONS AND PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES — Continued Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003; The Council on Governmental Ethics Laws, Lobbying: 2004 Update and state statutes and rules books, February 2004. Key: ★—Application exists. . . .—Not applicable. (a) Making campaign contributions if the lobbyist’s firm/employer is registered to lobby the agency of the candidate/officeholder. (b) Not specific to lobbyists. (c) Gift limit is $40 per calendar year, recreation limit is $100 per calendar year and honoraria is a maximum of $200 per speech. (d) Lobbyists making gifts in excess of the following thresholds to state officials: Connecticut, $10 for gifts per year, $50 for food and drink per year; Michigan, $49 per month per official. Food and beverage for immediate consumption is reportable but not limited. (e) Food and beverages for legislator, spouse and immediate family. (f) The Michigan Lobby Act uses the term lobbyist agent to define an individual or firm compensated more than $500.00 to lobby on behalf of clients or employers. The term lobbyist is defined under the act as the interest group or other person that makes expenditure in excess of $500.00 to lobby a single public official or in excess of $1,975.00 to lobby any number of public officials. These thresholds are for the 2004 calendar year. (g) Also applies to one month prior to and one month after session. (h) By regulatory agency which sets rates, charges, fees or prices. (i) Administrative does not have to register or report as long as they are lobbying in an official capacity. (j) Lobbying definition includes governor, lt. governor, constitutional officers, secretary of the cabinets and staff. (k) No lobbyist on behalf of himself or his principal, shall offer or provide to a legislator or his principal campaign committee any campaign contribution or loan resulting from a fundraising event held during a legislative session unless written notice of the fundraising function was given to the Board of Ethics at least 30 days prior to the function. (l) Food and beverage expenditures, no limit, not included in the $25 prohibition. (m) Adoptions of regulations and executive orders. (n) Lobbyist cannot solicit or transmit political contributions on behalf of

members or candidates for the General Assembly or the four statewide Executive Offices. (o) State senators or representatives may not lobby for balance of term when they resign from office. This prohibition does not apply to other public officials. (p) Employment of non-registered lobbyists. (q) Gifts valued at more than $50 in a calendar month. (r) State government agency liaisons lobbying on issues concerning their agency (no fee). (s) Must itemize items of $50.00 or more. (t) Campaign contributions/expenditures are specifically exempted from Ohio’s lobbying laws. (u) No limit on food and beverage consumed in presence of purchaser or provider; entertainment, such as NBA games, etc, is $100 per occasion or $250 per calendar year. (v) Expenditures in excess of $500 for entertainment, $500 for gifts and $500 for an award momento per year. (w) False communications, admission to floor of legislature, offering a loan, a gift of cash or negotiable instrument, an expenditure for transportation and lodging except for fact finding trips and a conference in which the member renders service. (x) Alaska law prohibits lobbyists from giving campaign contributions to candidates for the legislature other than to the candidate(s) that are campaigning to represent the district in which the lobbyist is registered to vote. (y) The office of the Governor and the Corporation Commission are the only two executive branch agencies/offices included in the definition of lobbying. (z) Covered in Senate and House Rules. (aa) Making contributions to a governor or governor’s PAC during a legislative session or during the period for veto overrides. (bb) Entertainment Ban 41-1232.08. (cc) All costs incurred for the purpose of influencing legislation. However personal expenses of the lobbyist spent on his own meals, travel, lodging or phone while in attendance as the legislative session not be reported. (dd) Amount is per occurrence (ee) Specifically exempted. (ff) Having a prior felony for unlawful lobbying.

The Council of State Governments

385


LOBBYING

Table 6.14 LOBBYISTS: REGISTRATION AND REPORTING Expenditures benefiting public officials or employees

Compensation received [broken down by employer(s)]

Total compensations received

Categories of expenditures

Total expenditures

Contributions received from others for lobbying purposes

Other

Quarterly Monthly (b) Quarterly and Semi-annually Quarterly and Annually (jj) Quarterly Reporting Bi-annual Registration

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

... 565 ★ (pp) 140 ... 4,629 ... 302 (e) 1,089

Colorado .................... Secretary of State Connecticut ................ State Ethics Comm. Delaware .................... Public Integrity Comm. Florida ........................ Lobbyist Registration Office, Legislative Info. Svcs. Div. Georgia ....................... State Ethics Comm.

Monthly Biennially, Monthly (b) Quarterly Semi-annually

★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ (d) ... ...

... ... ... ...

493 4,357 213 2,029

Annually and monthly (h)

...

...

...

...

...

(qq)

1,225

Hawaii ........................ Idaho ........................... Illinois ......................... Indiana ....................... Iowa ............................

State Ethics Comm. Secretary of State Secretary of State Lobby Registration Comm. Secretary of Senate, Clerk of House Ethics and Disclosure Board

Jan., March, May (o) Monthly (a) and annually Semi-annually and annually Semi-annually Monthly (b)

★ (i) ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ... ★

★ ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ★

... ... (j) (k) (p)

287 264 2,131 1,400 500

Kansas ........................ Kentucky .................... Louisiana ................... Maine .......................... Maryland ...................

Ethics Comm. Legislative Ethics Comm. Ethics Administration Program Comm. on Govt’l. Ethics Ethics Comm.

(m) (n) Annually and semi-annually (u) Monthly (a) and after session Semi-annually and annually

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ (q)

... ... ... ... ...

567 632 509 189 755

Semi-annually

...

(w)

639

Semi-annually

★ (r) . . .

...

...

(s)

1,250

Semi-annually

★ (t) . . .

...

...

1,210

Annually and 2 times per session ★ Semi-annually and annually (a) ★

★ ★

★ ...

★ ...

... ★

★ ★

... ...

... (q)(v)

369 1,200

State or other jurisdiction Alabama ..................... Alaska ......................... Arizona ....................... Arkansas .................... California ...................

Agency which administers registration and reports requirements for lobbyists Ethics Comm. Public Offices Comm. Secretary of State Ethics Comm. Fair Political Practices Comm. Secretary of State

Massachusetts ........... Secretary of Commonwealth Public Records Division Lobbyist Section Michigan .................... Department of State Bureau of Elections Minnesota .................. Campaign Finance & Public Disclosure Board Mississippi ................. Secretary of State Missouri ..................... Ethics Comm.

Frequency

Number of registered lobbyists

Legislation/administrative action seeking to influence

Disclosures required in lobbyist reports

Quarterly

Montana ..................... Commr. of Political Practices Nebraska .................... Clerk of Legislature Nevada ........................ Legislative Counsel Bureau New Hampshire ......... Secretary of State New Jersey ................. Election Law Enforcement Comm.

Annually (non-session) Monthly (during session) Quarterly (x) Three reports per year Annually and quarterly

...

...

...

1,074

★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ (ll) ★

★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★

★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ...

... ... (mm) ...

N.A. 842 178 577

New Mexico ............... Secretary of State New York .................... NYTS Commission on Lobbying North Carolina .......... Secretary of State North Dakota ............ Secretary of State Ohio ............................ Office of the Legislative Inspector General

Before, during & after session Bi-monthly and semi-annually

★ ★

★ ★

... ★

... ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ...

... ...

900 5,800

After session and year end Annually (kk)

... ... ★

... ... ★

(y) ... ...

... ... ...

★ ... ★

... ... ★

... ... ...

... ... ...

600 688 1,506

... ...

... ★

Oklahoma .................. Ethics Comm. Oregon ........................ Gov’t Standards & Practices Comm. Pennsylvania ............. State Ethics Comm. Rhode Island ............. Secretary of State South Carolina .......... Ethics Comm.

Semi-annually (cc)

... ★ ★ (i) ★

... ...

... ★

... ...

... (oo)

508 416

Quarterly and upon termination (dd) Semi-annually

★ ★ ★

★ ★ ...

★ (ii) ★ (ii) ★ (jj) ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ...

★ (ee) ... ...

784 815 347

South Dakota ............. Tennessee ................... Texas ........................... Utah ............................ Vermont .....................

Annually Semi-annually Monthly and annually (z) Annually (ff) 3 times per year

★ ... ★ ★ ...

... ... ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ★

... ★ (rr) ... ... ...

534 540 1,454 521 300

Secretary of State Registry of Election Finance Ethics Comm. State Elections Office Secretary of State

See footnotes at end of table.

386

The Book of the States 2005

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ★ ★ ...


LOBBYING

LOBBYISTS: REGISTRATION AND REPORTING — Continued

Legislation/administrative action seeking to influence

Expenditures benefiting public officials or employees

Compensation received [broken down by employer(s)]

Total compensations received

Categories of expenditures

Total expenditures

Contributions received from others for lobbying purposes

Other

Number of registered lobbyists

Disclosures required in lobbyist reports

Virginia ...................... Secretary of Commonwealth Washington ................ Public Disclosure Comm. West Virginia ............. Ethics Comm. Wisconsin ................... Ethics Board Wyoming .................... Secretary of State

Annually Monthly (nn) Every two years Biennially and Semi-annually Annually

★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ (gg) ...

(aa) ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ... (bb) ... ...

946 862 521 800 N.A.

Dist. of Columbia ......

Biennially

...

172

State or other jurisdiction

Agency which administers registration and reports requirements for lobbyists

Office of Campaign Finance

Frequency

Sources: The Council of State Governments’ survey, October 2003; The Council on Governmental Ethics Laws, Lobbying: 2004 Update and state statutes and rules books, February 2004. Key: ★—Application exists. . . .—Not applicable. (a) During legislative session. In Missouri, filed with the secretary of Senate and clerk of the House. (b) During legislative session, quarterly thereafter. (c) Must make separate disclosure report. (d) If formed primarily for lobbying. (e) These answers apply to reporting requirements, not registration. When registering, firm lists lobbyists, employers, agencies to be lobbied, effective date and length of contract, lobbying interest of each employer. Employer lists each employee lobbyist, firm contracted with, general lobbying interests, agencies to be lobbied and nature and interest of lobbyist employer. (f) Also, first, second and fourth quarters. (g) In detail, if over $10 per person. (h) Registration annually. Monthly reporting during session, end of July and end of December. (i) Subject areas only. (j) Required to declare general subject matter of lobbying activity. (k) Compensation received per employer, and total compensations received along with contributions from other for lobbying purposes is required to disclose compensation paid to others but not compensation received from others. (l) In the Senate, reports are required only if $15 or more is provided to senators or their staff on any one day. (m) January, February, March, April, May and September. (n) Initial registration covers a two-year period. Reporting is monthly January, February, March, April, May, then quarterly. (o) Register within five days of becoming a lobbyist and renew every oddnumbered year. Reporting three times a year. Reports due January 31, March 31 and May 31. (p) Campaign contributions to state office candidates. (q) To a limited extent. (r) Food and beverage expenditures for public officials with itemization required over $49.99 in a one-month period or $300 in a calendar year. Travel and lodging expenditures for public officials in excess of $650.00. Group food and beverage expenditures for public officials. (s) Financial transactions with public officials, immediate family members or their businesses of $1,0000 or more. Name and address of employees - any person compensated or reimbursed for lobbying in excess of $20.00 during any 12 month period. (t) Not political contributions. (u) Register annually. Expenditure reports are filed semi-annually. First report is due on August 15th covering the period of January 1st through June 30th. The second report is due on February 15th and covers the period of July 1st through December 31st. The second report is cumulative.

(v) Business relationships with public officials, if over $50. (w) Campaign contributions are reported. (x) Every other year in odd-number years when legislature is in session. (y) In North Carolina, the principal shall estimate and report the compensation paid or promised directly or indirectly, to all lobbyists based on estimated time, effort and expense in connection with lobbying activities on behalf of the principal. If a lobbyist is a full-time employee of the principal, or is compensated by means of an annual fee or retainer, the principal shall estimate and report the portion of all such lobbyists’ salaries or retainers that compensate the lobbyists for lobbying. (z) Annually if expenditures are not more than $1,000 during a calendar year. (aa) In the Commonwealth of Virginia, the lobbyist registers and reports. The employer (principal does not register and/or report). (bb) No compensation reporting. The registered lobbyist reports expenditures made by the lobbyist or the employer for the lobbying purposes. Principal (employer or organization) represented makes no reports to us. (cc) Registration is biennially; reporting is twice during non-session years and three times during session years. (dd) At specified times during legislative session and at end of legislative session. (ee) Reports required from lobbyist’s principal. (ff) Ten days after the general session, seven days before a general election, and seven days after the end of a special session or veto override session. Registrations expire at the end of even-numbered years. (gg) Such expenditures are prohibited. (hh) New York’s Lobbying Act of 2000 requires a description of the subject lobbied or expected to be lobbied, as well as listing the legislative bill number and the rule, regulation, and ratemaking number lobbied or expected to be lobbied. (ii) Must report all contributions to a principal in excess of 10 percent of principals total resources. (jj) Reports are filed monthly if the General Assembly is in session. (kk) Registration for executive agency lobbyists is annual. Registration for legislative lobbyists is every two years coinciding with legislative session. All lobbyists and their employers report three times per calendar year. (ll) Expenditures benefiting public officials over $50.00. (mm) General topic for each registration, not specific bills. (nn) Employer’s of lobbyists are required to file an annual report due by February 28th for lobbying expenses incurred during the previous period. (oo) Expenditures for legislative officials are itemized only if they exceed $70.00 on a single occasion. (pp) If married to or spousal equivalent of public official or legislative employee, lobbyists may only make contributions to legislative candidates in their voting district. Those contributions must be reported within 30 days. (qq) General business of party lobbied for, employment provided, members of public officials immediate family must be disclosed. (rr) Contributions made to candidates.

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INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUMS

2004 Initiatives and Referendums By John G. Matsusaka Ballot propositions continue to drive the policy agenda in the states, and 2004 spilled over into the presidential election. The most popular issue was marriage, with 13 states approving constitutional amendments defining marriage as between a man and a woman. Ballot propositions have been driving the policy agenda in the states for some time now, and this year was no exception. Constitutional amendments defining marriage played a role in the presidential campaign, and wins by high profile propositions on illegal immigration, stem cell research, and clean energy are likely to trigger a wave of similar legislative activity across the country. In all, 162 state-level measures went before the voters on November 2, 2004 with about two-thirds of them passing. The total number of measures was down by about 25 percent from November 2000, with much of the drop-off due to a decline in bond and revenue measures as states put their fiscal crises behind them. The 162 propositions were distributed across 34 states. California had the most-16-although this number was below the state’s average of 18 for general elections, and well below the peak of 48 measures in 1914. Table A lists the number of propositions by state, and the highest profile issues in each state. The passage rate of 67 percent was up somewhat from 62 percent in 2002. Of the 162 propositions, 101 were placed on the ballot by legislatures (“legislative measures”) and 59 were “initiatives,” qualified by citizen petition. There were also two petition referendums, measures that proposed to repeal laws passed by the legislature, and that qualify for the ballot by petition (Prop. 72 in California and R-55 in Washington).1 The number of initiatives was up from 53 in 2002, and brings the total for the last 10 years to more than 360. As Figure A shows, this is the highest 10-year total in history, and comes on the heels of big jumps in initiative activity in the preceding two decades. The initiative revolution that began with California’s Prop. 13 in 1978, shows no sign of slowing, and in fact seems to be accelerating.

I&R and the Presidential Election One of the most interesting developments this past year was the possibility that ballot propositions could influence the presidential election. Colorado’s Amendment 36 proposed to allocate the state’s nine presidential electors in proportion to the popular vote 388

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received by each candidate instead of giving them all to the state winner. The twist was that the measure was written to be retroactive: if approved, it would have applied to the presidential votes cast on the same day, in effect transferring four electoral votes from George Bush to John Kerry. Leading up to the election, there was speculation that the electoral votes of the two candidates could be close enough so that the election would turn on the fate of Amendment 36. If so, the initiative would have promptly landed in court, requiring judges to determine the winner in a reprise of 2000. As it turned out, the presidential election was not as close as expected, and Amendment 36 was soundly defeated, 34 percent to 66 percent. The measure was intended to jumpstart reform of the Electoral College, partly in response to dissatisfaction with the fact that the popular vote winner did not become president in 2000. The thrashing of Amendment 36, and the lack of controversy in the 2004 presidential race, will likely put a damper on reform efforts in the near future. The other issue that played a role in the presidential campaign was marriage. Constitutional amendments to define marriage as solely the union of a man and a woman were on the ballot in 11 states, including the critical “battleground” states of Michigan and Ohio (the others were Arkansas, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi, Montana, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Oregon and Utah; and Louisiana and Missouri adopted earlier in 2004). These measures were responses to a Massachusetts Supreme Court ruling in February 2004 holding that the state’s constitution contained a right to gay marriage. Legislatures and in some cases citizen groups placed these amendments on the ballot to prevent their own judges from finding a right to gay marriage in their constitutions. All of the amendments were approved by large margins. There were several schools of thought of how the marriage amendments might matter. One view was that the amendments would mobilize religious conservative voters to go to the polls, and once there they would support the GOP. The other view was that gay marriage proponents would turn out dispro-


INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUMS portionately and this would help the Democrats. Yet another possibility was the amendments would bring out black voters—who register among the highest disapproval of gay marriage among major demographic groups—which would help the Democrats. What actually happened is not clear at the time of writing. Exit polls noted a large fraction of voters who claimed to be motivated by “values’ but what this means is unclear. Moreover, there is not yet any reliable evidence that the marriage amendments did in fact disproportionately boost turnout of any particular group. Even if they did not affect turnout, they may have crystallized the distinction between the two presidential candidates for voters with strong feelings about the issue.

Conservatives versus Liberals

Table A: State-By-State Totals, 2004

State

Number of Number of initiatives & legislative referendums (a) measures (a)

Notable issues

Alabama ............... Alaska ................... Arizona ................. Arkansas ............... California .............

0 3 (1) 1(1) 1(1) 12 (5)

8 (3) 1 (1) 7 (3) 3 (1) 4 (4)

Obsolete racial language Marijuana legalization Illegal immigrants Marriage Stem cell bonds, employer health care

Colorado ............... Florida .................. Georgia ................. Hawaii ................... Indiana ..................

4 (2) 6 (6) 0 0 0

2 (1) 2 (2) 2 (2) 4 (4) 3 (3)

Presidential electors Contingency fees, malpractice Marriage Criminal procedures

Kentucky .............. Louisiana .............. Maine .................... Michigan ............... Mississippi ............

0 0 2 (0) 2 (2) 0

1 (1) 4 (4) 0 0 1 (1)

Marriage Right to hunt and trap Property tax limit Marriage Marriage

Missouri ................ Montana ............... Nebraska ............... Nevada .................. New Hampshire ...

1 (1) 4 (3) 4 (2) 6 (3) 0

0 3 (2) 4 (2) 2 (1) 1 (0)

Marriage, mining with cyanide Gambling Education spending

The initiative and referendum proNew Mexico .......... 0 7 (7) Four bond measures cesses have stubbornly refused to play North Carolina ..... 0 3 (3) ideological favorites. Direct democracy North Dakota ....... 1 (1) 0 Marriage Ohio ...................... 1 (1) 0 Marriage had its origins in the Progressive moveOklahoma ............. 0 9 (9) Marriage, lottery ment of the early 20th century, and Oregon .................. 6 (2) 2 (2) Marriage, logging progressives used the processes to adRhode Island ........ 0 14 (10) 12 bond measures South Carolina ..... 0 2 (1) Minibottles vance a host of issues that would be South Dakota ........ 1 (0) 2 (0) called “liberal” under today’s terminolUtah ...................... 1 (0) 3 (3) Marriage, bonds for open space ogy, such as welfare, old age pensions, Virginia ................. 0 2 (2) Apportionment Washington ........... 5 (2) 0 Sales tax for education and women’s suffrage.2 Starting in the West Virginia ........ 0 1 (1) 1970s, conservatives began to score big Wyoming .............. 0 4 (2) Pain and suffering awards wins as well, especially on tax measures, Total ...................... 61 (33) 101 (75) but also on social policies such as capiSource: Data for elected officials are current as of January 2005 and have been provided by tal punishment, abortion, and affirmative the Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University. Key: action/racial preferences. 2004 was a ★—Denotes that this position is filled through a statewide election. fairly typical year in this regard. ConserW—Denotes that this position is filled through a statewide election and is held by a woman. . . .—Denotes that this position is filled through methods other than a statewide election. vatives won big on the 11 marriage amendments, a Florida amendment requiring parental notification of abortion, and a Colorado measure cutting off public services insurance to their workers. The mixed results for liberals and conservatives to illegal immigrants. Conservatives suffered a loss when a Maine initiative that would have capped prop- reinforce that initiatives and referendums are ideoerty taxes was rejected. Liberals got their share with logically neutral. They provide opportunities for wins in Florida and Nevada on measures that increase groups of any ideology that are not given a fair hearthe minimum wage, and a Colorado amendment that ing by the legislature.3 requires large utilities to generate a certain amount of power from clean energy sources such as solar, High Profile Issues hydro, wind and biomass. Liberals were defeated in As usual, a wide variety of issues were considan attempt to legalize the use, production, and sale ered this past year. Table B lists the number of variof marijuana in Alaska, and the repeal of California ous types of issues. Some of the more prominent islaw that required large businesses to provide health sues are discussed in what follows: The Council of State Governments

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INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUMS

Table B: Subjects in 2004 Subject

Number of propositions

Abortion .................................................................................. 1 Alcohol & marijuana ............................................................ 4 Apportionment ....................................................................... 1 Bonds ..................................................................................... 21 Crime ....................................................................................... 6 Economic development ......................................................... 5 Education ................................................................................ 7 Elections .................................................................................. 7 Environment (includes animals) ....................................... 10 Gambling .............................................................................. 13 Government administration ................................................ 6 Government powers ............................................................ 10 Health care ............................................................................. 3 Initiative & referendum ........................................................ 5 Immigration ........................................................................... 1 Insurance ................................................................................ 1 Lawsuits .................................................................................. 7 Marriage ............................................................................... 11 Minimum wage ...................................................................... 2 Miscellaneous ......................................................................... 7 Officeholders, qualifications & salaries ............................. 4 Impeachment and succession ............................................... 3 Taxes ...................................................................................... 22 Term limits ............................................................................. 4 Transportation ....................................................................... 1 Source: Initiative & Referendum Institute

Marijuana The marijuana legalization movement appears to be losing steam. The most far-reaching proposition, Alaska’s Measure 2 that would have entirely legalized marijuana for people over the age of 21, was decisively rejected 43-57. An attempt to establish state-run medical marijuana dispensaries in Oregon (Measure 33) was also rejected. The only success was in Montana, were voters approved a measure to allow limited use of marijuana for medical purposes (I-148). A total of 11 states now allow medical marijuana. 4 Gambling Gambling was one of the most popular topics in 2004, with 13 measures on the ballot in six states. These measures were among the most expensive, with over $90 million spent on two gambling initiatives in California alone. Voters were not particularly receptive to expansions in gambling, rejecting a California measure that would have allowed un390

The Book of the States 2005

limited tribal gambling, a California measure that would have allowed nontribal gambling, and a Washington measure that would have allowed non-tribal gambling. Nebraska voters faced five measures related to casinos, and rejected the three that would have authorized the casinos. The brightest spot for gambling was in Oklahoma, were voters approved two propositions establishing a state lottery and another that expanded Indian gaming. A measure in Florida that allowed slot machines in Miami-Dade and Broward counties narrowly passed. Election Reform The Electoral College was the most visible issue concerning elections, due to Colorado’s Amendment 36, discussed above. Proposals to create runoff primary elections instead of closed primaries were rejected in California (Prop. 62) and approved in Washington (I-872). A measure to allow runoff primaries in local elections was rejected in New Mexico (Amendment 3). Fiscal Measures A total of 41 tax and bond measures went before the voters in November, down by about one-third from 2002. The bond measure involving the most money was Prop. 71 in California, an initiative that authorized a $3 billion bond issue to be used for stem cell research. The measure was approved 59 percent to 41 percent, attracting support from both conservatives and liberals. California voters also approved Prop. 61, which authorized a $750 million bond issue for children’s hospitals. All told, the state’s voters added an estimated $250 million to the state’s annual debt service when all the bonds are issued, according to the state’s nonpartisan Legislative Analyst. Arkansas voters approved $500 million bond issue for economic development. The largest bond issue to fail was Utah’s Initiative 1 that would have authorized $150 million for open spaces, and increased the sales tax to service the debt. The most expensive tax measure was Washington’s I-884 that would have increased the state’s sales tax by 1 percent (to a national high of 7.5 percent) with the money going to education. The tax increase was anticipated to generate about $1 billion per year. Voters turned it down, 39 percent to 61 percent. California voters approved a 1 percent surtax on millionaires, with the proceeds dedicated to mental health services. Sin tax measures were approved in Colorado, Montana and Oklahoma, and rejected in Alabama.


INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUMS Environment Voters decided 10 environmental measures, endorsing the “green” position in four cases and the “brown” position in six cases. The most far-reaching was Colorado’s Amendment 37, discussed above, that requires large utilities to use clean energy sources. Voters in four states expressed their support for hunting either by approving hunting rights (Louisiana and Montana) or rejecting limits on bear hunting (Alaska and Maine). Heath Care Costs, Malpractice, and Lawsuits The rising cost of health care featured prominently in the presidential campaigns and played out in the states with 10 measures. An alleged cause of rising costs is lawsuits, and trial lawyers were the target of several propositions. Measures to limit pain-and-suffering awards were approved in Nevada (Question 3) and rejected in Oregon (Measure 35) and Wyoming (Amendment D). Measures to limit attorney fees or require mediation were approved in Florida (Amendment 3) and Wyoming (Amendment C). Counter-initiatives sponsored by trial lawyers were rejected in Nevada (Questions 4, 5) and approved in Florida (Amendments 7, 8). California’s Prop. 72 mandating employer-provided health insurance was rejected.

Money Final totals are unavailable at the time of writing, but the amount of money involved was considerable. Estimates are that roughly $200 million was spent in

California, over $30 million in Florida, and over $10 million in Colorado. To put these numbers in perspective, the presidential campaigns of George Bush and John Kerry were expected to spend in the vicinity of $300 million to $350 million. Despite concerns about the role of money in ballot proposition campaigns, however, it remains the case that money can’t buy you law. Gambling interests spent upwards of $90 million on two initiatives in California yet only managed 16 percent and 24 percent of the votes in favor. Money allows groups to make proposals but does not determine the final outcome.5

Author’s Note This article uses referendums instead of referenda as the plural of referendum following the Oxford English Dictionary and common practice.

Notes 1 For state-by-state descriptions of legal provisions, see Dane M. Waters, The Initiative and Referendum Almanac, (Carolina Academic Press, 2003), or www.iandinstitute.org. 2 John G. Matsusaka, “Fiscal Effects of the Voter Initiative in the First Half of the Twentieth Century,” Journal 3 Ibid. 4 See note 1 above. 5 Elisabeth R. Gerber, The Populist Paradox: Interest Group Influence and the Promise of Direct Legislation, (Princeton University Press, 1999).

Figure A: Number of Statewide Initiatives 400

Number of Initiatives

350 300 250 200 150 100 50 0 1905–14

1915–24

1925–34

1935–44

1945–54

1955–64

1965–74

1975–84

1985–94

1995–2004

Source: Initiative & Referendum Institute

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INITIATIVE AND REFERENDUMS

About the Author John G. Matsusaka is a professor of business and law at the University of Southern California and president of

392

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the Initiative and Referendum Institute at USC. He is the author of For the Many or the Few: The Initiative, Public Policy, and American Democracy (University of Chicago Press, 2004).


Measure 1 Measure 2 Measure 3 Measure 4

Proposition 100 Proposition 101 Proposition 102 Proposition 103 Proposition 104 Proposition 105 Proposition 200 Proposition 300

Amendment 1 Amendment 2 Amendment 3 Referred Question 1

Proposition 1A Proposition 55 Proposition 56 Proposition 57 Proposition 58 Proposition 59 Proposition 60 Proposition 60A Proposition 61 Proposition 62 Proposition 63 Proposition 64 Proposition 65 Proposition 66 Proposition 67 Proposition 68 Proposition 69 Proposition 70 Proposition 71 Proposition 72

Alaska ............................

Arizona ..........................

Arkansas .......................

California ......................

See footnotes at end of table.

Amendment 1 Amendment 2 Amendment 3 Amendment 4 Amendment 5 Amendment 6 Amendment 7 Amendment 8

Measure

Alabama (a) ..................

State

General March 2, 2004 Primary March 2, 2004 Primary March 2, 2004 Primary March 2, 2004 Primary General General General General General General General General General General General General General General General

General General General General

General General General General General General General General

General General General General

General General General General General General General General

Type of election

Table 6.15 STATE INITIATIVES & REFERENDUMS, 2004

LR LR I LR LR LR LR LR I I I I I I I I I I I PR

LR LR I LR

LR LR LR LR LR LR I LR

LR I I I

LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR

Type

State and Local Government Education Budget Budget Budget Constitutional Law Elections Revenue Health Elections Health Economic Development Taxes Criminal and Civil Justice Health Gambling/Lotteries Criminal Justice Gambling/Lotteries Health Health

Elections Economic Development Constitutional Law Education

Natural Resources Initiatives and Referenda Education Judicial Initiatives and Referenda Board of Education Constitutional Law Legislatures

Elections Criminal and Civil Justice Natural Resources Elections

Economic Development Constitutional Law Economic Development Economic Development Education Judicial Taxes Transportation

Revenue State and Tribal Government DNA State and Tribal Government Bond Economic Development

Taxes Taxes Law Enforcement Taxes Stem Cell Research Insurance

Revenue Revenue Civil Law State and Local Government

★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Economy State and Local Government

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

Pass

Social Services

Term Limits Bond Marriage

Federal Illegal Immigration

State and Local Government Restrictions on Initiatives

Health Bear Baiting

State and Local Government Obsolete Language State and Local Government Agriculture State and Local Government Salaries Budget Vehicles

Civil Law Anti-runoff State Property Bond Runoff Primary Taxes Constitutional Law Revenues

Taxes Bonds Taxes Bonds

Legislatures Taxes Civil Law Property Taxes

Environment Elections Economic Development Justices of the Peace Elections Constitutional Law Elections Salaries

Initiative Signatures Marijuana Criminal and Civil Justice Senate Vacancies

Commerce Civil Law Commerce Commerce Property Taxes State and Local Government State and Local Government Taxes

Topics addressed by measure

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★

Fail

INITIATIVES AND REFERENDUM

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394 Contractor Liability Tobacco

The Book of the States 2005

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

See footnotes at end of table.

Maine .............................

Question 1 Question 2

Question 1

Amendment 1 Amendment 2 Amendment 3 Amendment 4

Amendment 1

Amendment 1

Kentucky (a) .................

Louisiana (a) .................

General

Carry-over Measure June 8, 2004 General General

Sept. 18, 2004 Open Primary Election General General General General

I I

I

LR LR LR LR

LR

LR

Property Taxes Natural Resources

Education

Natural Resources Taxes Labor Agriculture

Constitutional Law

Constitutional Law

Civil Law

Revenues Criminal and Civil Justice

Taxes

Constitutional Law Revenues Government Administration Commerce

Civil Law

Funding

Veterans Economic Development

Civil Law

Marriage

Marriage

Economic Development Term Limits

★ ★ ★

★(d)

★ ★ ★ ★

★(c )

★ ★

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Revenues Administrative State and Local Government

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Property Taxes State and Local Government Gubernatorial Succession

Iowa (a) .........................

LR LR LR

★ ★ ★ ★

Kansas (a) .....................

General General General

Sexual assault Sex Offenders

Public Question 1 Public Question 2 Public Question3

Law Enforcement Public Safety Constitutional Law Felony Charges

Marriage

Indiana (a) ....................

Criminal and Civil Justice Criminal and Civil Justice Criminal and Civil Justice Criminal and Civil Justice

Civil Law Jurisdiction

★ ★

Idaho ..............................

LR LR LR LR

Constitutional Law Judicial

Illinois (f) ......................

General General General General

LR LR

Patient Rights Medical License Revocation

Constitutional and Civil Law Constitutional and Civil Law

Amendment 1 Amendment 2 Amendment 3 Amendment 4

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Hawaii (a) .....................

General General

Privacy Filing Initiatives Attorney Contingency Fees Education Minimum Wage

Health Constitutional Law Health Taxes Labor

Amendment 1 Amendment 2

Constitutional Law Elections Judicial Gambling/Lotteries Employment Transportation Health Health

Georgia (a) ....................

LR LR I I I I I I

Amendment 1 Amendment 2 Amendment 3 Amendment 4 Amendment 5 Amendment 6 Amendment 7 Amendment 8 General General General General General General General General

★ ★

Florida ...........................

Civil Service Obsolete language

Fail

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Constitutional and Civil Law Health Electoral Votes Natural Resources State and Local Government Civil Law

Pass

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Economic Development Taxes Elections Energy Labor Constitutional Law

Topics addressed by measure

Connecticut (a) .............

I I I I LR LR

Type

Delaware (a) .................

General General General General General General

Type of election

Amendment 34 Amendment 35 Amendment 36 Amendment 37 Referendum A Referendum B

Measure

Colorado .......................

State

STATE INITIATIVES & REFERENDUMS, 2004—Continued

INITIATIVES AND REFERENDUM


Type Topics addressed by measure

Pass

Fail

Amendment 1

Missouri ........................

The Council of State Governments

Question 1 Question 2 Question 3 Question 4 Question 5 Question 6 Question 7 Question 8

Question 1

Nevada ...........................

New Hampshire (a) ......

See footnotes at end of table.

I I Gambling/Lotteries Marriage Constitutional Law Civil Law

★ ★

General Election

General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election

General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election

General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election

August 3, 2004 Primary Election August 3, 2004 Primary Election General Election

General Election

LR

I I I I I I LR LR

I I I I LR LR LR LR

LR LR LR I I I I

I

LR

I

LR Marriage

Judicial

Education Education Judicial Insurance Rates Judicial Labor Elections Taxes

Gambling/Lotteries Initiatives Gambling/Lotteries Gambling/Lotteries Property Taxes Lieutenant Governor Gambling/Lotteries Gambling/Lotteries

Environment Environment Term limits Marriage Environment Health Tobacco

Transportation

Marriage

Gambling

Legislature

Legal Employment Constitutional and Civil Law Revenue

Budget Budget Health

Budget

Taxes Elections Taxes Local Government Historical Properties Legislature

Natural resources Natural resources Elections Constitutional Law Natural resources Criminal justice Health

Taxes

Constitutional Law

Constitutional Law

Frivolous Lawsuits Minimum Wage Obsolete language

Attorney Contingency Fees

Revenues

Taxes

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★ Medical Marijuana Taxes Legislature

★ ★

Budget Constitutional and Civil Law Legislature Civil Law

Revenue

Civil Law

Civil Law

★(e)

★ ★

★ ★

Amendment 3 Amendment 4 Amendment 5 Bond Issue 1 Bond Issue 2 Bond Issue 3 Bond Issue 4 General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election

LR LR LR LR LR LR LR

Elections Property Taxes State and Local Government Taxes Health and Human Services Taxes Education

State and Local Government Revenue Education Revenue Taxes Revenue Taxes

Runoff Veterans Handicapped Bond Revenue Bond Bond

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Initiative Measure 417 Initiative Measure 418 Initiative Measure 419 Initiative Measure 420 Amendment 1 Amendment 2 Amendment 3 Amendment 4

Nebraska .......................

New Jersey (a) ..............

C-40 C-41 C-42 C-96 I-147 I-148 I-149

Montana ........................

Amendment 3

Amendment 2

Amendment 1

New Mexico (a) ............

General Election General Election

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Proposal 04-1 Proposal 04-2

Mississippi ....................

Minnesota (a) ...............

Michigan .......................

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Type of election

Massachusetts ..............

Measure

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Maryland (a) ................

State

STATE INITIATIVES & REFERENDUMS, 2004—Continued

INITIATIVES AND REFERENDUM

395


396

Measure Type of election Type Topics addressed by measure

Pass

Fail

The Book of the States 2005

Question 705 Question 706 Question 707 Question 708 Question 711 Question 712 Question 713 Question 714 Question 715

Measure 30

Oklahoma .....................

Oregon ...........................

General Election

Question 2

See footnotes at end of table.

General Election

Question 1

South Carolina (a) .......

General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election

Amendment 1 Amendment 2 Question 3 Question 4 Question 5 Question 6 Question 7 Question 8 Question 9 Question 10 Question 11 Question 12 Question 13 Question 14

Rhode Island (a) ..........

2004 General Primary

Question 1

Special Election February 3, 2004 General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election

General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election

General

General

General General General

Pennsylvania (a) ...........

Measure 31 Measure 32 Measure 33 Measure 34 Measure 35 Measure 36 Measure 37 Measure 38

Constitutional 1

Amendment 1

North Dakota ...............

Ohio ...............................

Amendment 1 Amendment 2 Amendment 3

LR

LR

LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR

LR

LR LR I I I I I I

LR

LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR LR

I

I

LR LR LR

Legislature Transportation State and Local Government Education Health Constitutional Law Civil Law Insurance

Education

Education Education Local Government Rainy Day Fund Constitutional Law Tribal Relations Taxes Revenue Veterans

Constitutional and Civil Law

Constitutional and Civil Law

Commerce Budget Election Reform

Commerce and Economic Development Agriculture

Separation of Powers Constitutional Law Transportation Education Education Cultural Natural Resources Environment Education Education Cultural State and Local Government Education Commerce and Economic Development

Taxes

Constitutional and Civil Law Constitutional Convention Taxes Taxes Taxes Taxes Local Government Natural Resources Taxes Taxes Taxes Taxes Taxes Taxes

Water and Wastewater Infrastructure Grant

Elections Taxes Health Natural Resources Judicial Marriage Constitutional Law Labor

Taxes

Lottery Lottery State Government Budget Marriage Gambling Tobacco Property Taxes Property Taxes

Marriage

Marriage

Taxes Education Judicial

Revenue

★ ★ ★ Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds Revenue/Bonds

★ ★

★ ★ ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★

State and Local Government

Revenues Medical Marijuana Economic Development Limits Settlement Amounts Civil Law State and Local Government State Accident Insurance Fund

Budgets

Revenue Senior Citizens

Civil Law

Budget

State and Local Government

★ ★ ★

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ (b) ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

North Carolina (a) .......

New York (a) .................

State

STATE INITIATIVES & REFERENDUMS, 2004—Continued

INITIATIVES AND REFERENDUM


Topics addressed by measure

Pass

★ ★ ★

Fail

★ ★ ★

LR LR LR LR State Government Commerce Medical Malpractice Pain and Suffering Awards

Source: The Council of State Governments’ survey of election web sites, January 2005. Key: LR—Legislative referendum I—Initiative PR—Popular referendum O—Other (a) State does not have an initiative process. (b) State had no ballot measures in November 2004. (c) State District judge ruled that the amendment violated the state constitution. (d) This citizen-initiated legislation was presented to the voters in November, 2003, along with a competing measure proposed by the Legislature. At the 2003 election, the citizen initiative received a greater number of votes than either the competing measure or the option to reject both measures. It received less than a majority but more than one third of the total votes cast on that question. Accordingly, the Maine Constitution requires that the citizen initiative be resubmitted by itself to the voters for their approval or rejection at the next statewide election. (e) Requires 2/3 majority to pass. (f) The state has an initiative process, but it is unusable.

General Election General Election General Election General Election

Veterans

Local Government Economic Development Judicial Judicial

Bond

Revenue Revenue ★

★ ★

★ ★

★ ★ ★

Revenue State and Local Government Mediation before Lawsuits Health

★ ★

Amendment A Amendment B Amendment C Amendment D

LR

Taxes Taxes Charter Schools

Emergency Preparedness

Wyoming .......................

General Election

Environmental Protection Elections Education Gambling Education

Redistricting/Apportionment State and Local Government

Amendment 1

I I I I PR

Elections Gubernatorial Succession

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

General Election General Election General Election General Election General Election

LR LR

Impeachment Economic Development Civil Law Cultural

West Virginia (a) ..........

Initiative 297 Initiative 872 Initiative 884 Initiative 892 Referendum 55

Washington ...................

General Election General Election

Constitutional Law Commerce Constitutional Law Environment/Natural Resources

Wisconsin (a) ................

Amendment 1 Amendment 2

Virginia (a) ...................

Legislature Education Marriage Taxes, Revenue/Bonds

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

LR LR LR I

Vermont (a) ...................

General Election General Election General Election General Election

Amendment 1 Amendment 2 Amendment 3 Initiative 1

Exempts Food

Revenue

Utah ...............................

Nominations

Elections

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Judicial Education Taxes

Texas (a) ........................

Type LR LR I

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- (b) ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Type of election General Election General Election General Election

Tennessee (a) ................

Measure

Amendment A Amendment B Measure 1

South Dakota ................

State

STATE INITIATIVES & REFERENDUMS, 2004—Continued

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State Budgets: Recent Trends and Outlook By Donald J. Boyd States are recovering from the recent fiscal crisis, but many will need to cut spending further or increase taxes to bring spending and revenue into line. In addition, states must confront fiscal pressures in Medicaid, elementary and secondary education, and other areas, and will face risks from actions to reduce the federal budget deficit. The Fiscal Crisis and How States Have Responded State tax revenue fell 10 percent between fiscal year 2000 and 2003, adjusted for inflation, population growth and legislated changes—far more than the relatively mild recession would have suggested, and nearly twice as much as in the crises of the early 1980s and early 1990s. States were better prepared for this recession than the prior one. They buffered much of the initial revenue shock by drawing fund balances down from 10.4 percent of expenditures to 3.2 percent, a drop of 7.2 percentage points compared with only a 3.7 percent drop in the previous recession (when fund balances at the start were lower). States also garnered considerable nonrecurring revenue by issuing bonds that allowed them to convert annual tobacco settlement revenue into a few large payments. Drawing down balances and tapping nonrecurring revenue sources allowed states to push some of the problem off to future years. Elected officials and the public in most states have had little appetite for tax and fee increases. Cumulative increases in response to this crisis have amounted to only 3.5 percent of own-source revenue, down sharply from the 9 percent increases in each of the prior two crises. Spending cuts have been more popular: states have cut real per-capita general fund spending by about 6.4 percent from its 2001 peak, similar to reductions in the 1980s crisis but far deeper than in the early 1990s when states hardly cut aggregate spending at all. Tax revenue fell so far in this crisis that subsequent tax increases and economic growth have not been enough to raise revenue to its prior level. For the nation as a whole, state tax revenue in 2004 was still 6.7 percent below the 2000 pre-crisis peak, adjusted for inflation and population growth.1 By contrast, four years after the last crisis hit real per-capita state tax revenue in 1994 was 6.8 percent above its 1990 pre-crisis peak (Figure A). Tax revenue has continued to recover in 2005, but assuming states hit their budgeted estimates they will still end the year

more than 4 percent below 2000. The failure of state tax revenue to recover to precrisis levels despite tax increases and economic growth is widespread, as Figure B shows: 36 states had lower real per capita tax revenue in 2004 than in 2000, and the median for these “shortfall” states was 8.0 percent below 2000. States that are the furthest below 2000 generally rely heavily on income tax revenue or had economies that were hit disproportionately hard by the recession. Wyoming and several other states with large increases in revenue benefited from increases related to oil, natural gas and other natural resources that tend not to follow the national business cycle. Simply put, current state revenue structures cannot support as much spending as before the crisis. To be sure, states have cut spending, although it is difficult to measure quite how much. The earliest available data on state expenditures come from reports state budget offices provide to the National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO). Unfortunately, these data generally serve the needs of the annual budget process and are not always classified the same way from year to year (or from state to state). In each of the last two recessions, the NASBO data tended to show considerably deeper cuts in state budgets than the more comprehensive and consistent expenditure data reported by the Census Bureau two years later. NASBO data might overstate spending cuts in this crisis as well, but we won’t know for nearly two years. NASBO data show that total state general fund expenditures have declined by 3.3 percent between 2000 and 2004, adjusted for inflation and population growth.2 However, this overstates cuts in recurring spending because it includes capital spending financed by the general fund as well as operating expenditures. States tend to scale general fund capital spending back sharply in crises, either deferring capital projects or financing them from other sources such as bonds and dedicated revenue. Although these cuts help to balance annual budgets, the spending can spring back sharply The Council of State Governments

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Figure A: Real Per Capita State Government Tax Revenue Indexed to Pre-Crisis Peak, 2 Crises (actual revenue, not adjusted for legislation) 115

1995

index relative to prior peak

110

105 Last crisis 1990

100 1988

2000

95 1998

2005

This crisis

90

85 -2

-1

0

1

2

3

4

5

# of years from pre-crisis peak Sources: Taxes: Through 2002, cenfin database (Rockefeller Institute database of Census Bureau data). For 2003, Census state tax collections from their website (2002 tax data from this Census source matches 2002 from other Census sources, giving comfort that the 2002 to 2003 growth rate is appropriate). For 2004, growth rate from Rockefeller Institute Revenue Report tax data (as collected by Nick Jenny) applied to 2003 Census tax data. For 2005: assume that state budget offices’ forecasted growth rates (from NASBO’s Fiscal Survey) for income, sales, and corporate taxes reflect what will happen to taxes as a whole (see below) Population: Through 2002, cenfin database. For 2003, 2004, from same census pop source. For 2005, assumed to grow 1% based on recent prior history the population data were pieced together from various Census Bureau sources and are all on a July 1 (not April 1) basis. Inflation: slgcwpi (state and local government chain-weighted price index)—BEA. For 2005 (cy 2004), assumed to be 3 percent based on my earlier analysis of how inflation was running for the year.

after the crisis ends. Between 2000 and 2004 state governments cut general fund capital spending by 48 percent in real per-capita terms—reductions that probably will not be sustained. Table A removes general fund capital spending, showing just spending on operations. By this measure, spending fell by 2.9 percent between 2000 and 2004—well shy of the 6.7 percent tax revenue decline in the same period.3 As the table shows, spending on Medicaid increased by 6.4 percent, while all other areas in aggregate were cut back. State support for higher education was cut particularly sharply, leading to double-digit tuition increases in many public universities. 402

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In about half of the states general fund spending grew faster than tax revenue between 2000 and 2004, adjusted for inflation and population growth, and by at least 5 percentage points faster in more than a dozen states. The implication is that despite improving revenue collections, many states still will need to raise taxes or cut spending further to keep budgets balanced. This is consistent with reports that approximately half the states faced gaps for FY 2006 at the time governors were preparing proposed budgets.4

Spending Pressures Medicaid: After a brief slowdown in the late 1990s, Medicaid returned for several years to double-digit

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Figure B: Percentage Change in Real Per Capita State Tax Revenue, 2000 to 2004

growth rates and now is the single-largest area of state government spending (including spending from state funds and federal funds), ahead of elementary and secondary education. The growth resulted from many factors that are difficult or impossible for states to control, including expensive and rapidly evolving technologies and drugs (which affect privately funded health care as well as public programs), and growth in enrollment of expensive-to-care-for disabled and “dual eligible� populations (individuals eligible both for Medicare and for Medicaid). In addition, state and federal policy choices to expand Medicaid to cover more low-income children and pregnant women and to reach out to potentially eligible populations and enroll them in Medicaid have contributed to spending increases.5 Many of these forces will continue to drive Med-

icaid costs upward in coming years. In addition, the aging of the population will begin to have a significant impact. This is important because the average elderly Medicaid recipient costs more than seven times as much to care for as the average low-income adult or child. Economy.com forecasts the population aged 65 and over will grow by about 8.5 percent between 2005 and 2010, and growth will accelerate after that. By contrast, the under-65 population is expected to grow by 3.8 percent between 2005 and 2010. As the population ages, states may find it difficult to finance rapidly increasing demand for Medicaid-financed prescription drugs and expensive longterm care services. Many Southwestern and Mountain states are likely to feel this pressure soonest, with most facing growth in the next 10 years of 45 percent or more6 (see Table B). The Council of State Governments

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BUDGET and secondary education enrollment growth is slowing in most of the nation, although there will be pockets of rapid growth. Over Table A: the next five years, the number of children in Real Per Capita General Fund the 5–19 age group is forecasted by Operating Expenditures Economy.com to decline in two-thirds of the states. Most of the significant exceptions are Amount per capita (2004 $) in the southwest or west—Nevada, Arizona, Programs FY 2000 FY 2004 Percent change Alaska, California and Texas all will see Total $1,821.2 $1,768.7 -2.9% population in this age group increase by 5 Elementary and secondary education 656.5 626.8 -4.5 percent or more over the next five years. Medicaid 275.1 292.8 6.4 However, the pressures to increase spendHigher education 231.1 203.5 -11.9 ing per pupil are larger than ever. Even beAll other 658.5 645.6 -1.9 fore the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), Sources: National Association of State Budget Officers Expediture Report 2001 states were raising graduation and learning and 2003 (state expenditures), Bureau of Economic Analysis (state and local govstandards, creating demand for updated texternment chain-weighted price index), and Bureau of the Census (population). books and curricula, smaller class sizes, more highly qualified teachers, more academic intervention services, enhanced summer learning opportunities, and other supports, all of which cost money. NCLB will intensify these Table B: demands. In addition, almost every state has Projected Growth in Population Aged 65+: had its system of financing education chalStates Facing Fastest Growth, 2005 to 2010 lenged in court and about two-thirds of challenges in the past 15 years have been successful, creating additional pressure to spend State 2005 to 2010 2005 to 2015 more. United States median 8.5% 24.7% The costs of meeting higher standards and Nevada 28.8 71.2 responding to court challenges cannot be esArizona 22.5 57.9 timated with any confidence, but it is clear Alaska 21.5 49.5 they could be very large. One recent study Colorado 21.0 52.4 estimated statistically the costs of bringing Utah 20.5 52.2 low-performing school districts in Texas up Idaho 19.0 48.9 Georgia 18.4 48.4 to the statewide average on certain exams, and Washington 18.1 46.7 concluded that it would take a doubling of Oregon 17.6 47.3 state aid to school districts in Texas to accomTexas 15.2 39.9 plish this.8 The court-appointed referees in a New York lawsuit recently issued a report esSource: Rockefeller Institute analysis of projections from economy.com. timating an increased need of $5.6 billion annually in New York City, a more-than-40 Analysts at the Centers for Medicare and Medic- percent increase.9 Cost studies associated with litiaid Services recently forecasted that state govern- gation in other states also have concluded that spendment Medicaid spending will continue to grow faster ing increases would need to be very large. Some rethan the overall economy for the foreseeable future, searchers argue that higher spending will not lead rising at an average annual rate of 8.6 percent for the systematically to higher student achievement, but in nation as a whole over the period from 2006 through the context of the existing education system it seems 2014—3.6 percentage points faster annually than the clear that states, school districts, parents, and courts economy is projected to grow, and 5.4 percentage will seek considerably higher spending. points faster than population growth plus general Higher education: Higher education is the thirdprice inflation.7 Thus, even without major changes largest spending category for the state-local secin federal participation Medicaid seems likely to tor. Public colleges and universities enroll more than 12 million students and account for more than strain state finances. Elementary and secondary education: Elementary 77 percent of all higher education enrollment. State 404

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BUDGET expenditures on higher education as a share of gross domestic product have fallen almost continuously since 1976, in part reflecting graduation of baby boomers from the higher education system and in part reflecting lower priority for higher education than for other services. State contributions to public higher education institutions were battered in the recent fiscal crisis—real state appropriations for public higher education institutions fell by 7.8 percent between FY 2002 and FY 2004, and declined in 36 states, contributing to widespread double-digit increases in tuition. Labor markets are demanding that workers have more higher education—the U.S. Department of Labor estimates that occupations in which threequarters or more of workers have at least some college education will constitute 43 percent of the new jobs in the decade from 2002 to 2012, despite accounting for only 29 percent of current jobs.10 This labor market demand is likely to lead to higher college participation rates among people in the labor force of all ages. In addition, underlying demographic forces will drive up enrollment in some states, as baby boomers’ children exit high school and enter college. For the nation as a whole, this should place only mild pressure on the higher education system, but in some states the population in the largest college-going age group, 20–24 year olds, will grow substantially. According to Economy.com, growth will be fastest in the Northeastern states and California and as a result these states may face additional pressure to finance higher education. Other important areas of state and local finance: Medicaid, elementary and secondary education, and higher education are the three largest areas in the typical state budget and all face spending pressure. Some smaller areas will face pressure as well, while others may provide fiscal savings. One notable area that could cause difficulty for some governments is employee pensions: state and local government pension fund earnings more than doubled relative to state and local budgets between 1990 and 2000, allowing governments to scale back contributions (with a lag) by more than 30 percent despite rising pension obligations. That trend has since reversed and many state and local governments now face rapidly rising pension contributions that are sometimes quite significant relative to their budgets.

Federal Budget Cuts and Policy Changes Federal deficit-reducing actions will affect states in several important ways, including cuts in grant

programs and proposals to restructure the federal tax system. The discussion below is based on the president’s proposed budget; the final budget could impose larger cuts than those discussed here, or smaller cuts, but is likely to include significant cuts in any event. Federal grants to state and local governments were $423 billion in FY 2004, accounting for one quarter of the federal budget for domestic programs. Grants account for approximately 30 percent of all state government revenue and 4 percent of local government revenue.11 Approximately one-third of federal grants are labeled “mandatory” and the rest are discretionary. Large well-known mandatory grant programs include Medicaid, Temporary Assistance to Needy Families and child nutrition programs. Large well-known discretionary programs include Title I education grants for the disabled, special education grants, and various public housing and community development grants.

Cuts in Federal Grants Other than Medicaid The president’s budget proposes sharp cuts in grants to state and local governments. In FY 2006, discretionary grants would be cut by 9.2 percent in real per capita terms, and grants for mandatory programs other than Medicaid would be cut by 5.8 percent.12 Combined, these cuts would be equivalent to about a 2.4 percent reduction in state government tax revenue. The budget does not itemize cuts in grants beyond 2006, but it proposes caps on domestic discretionary spending that would lead to cuts between 2005 and 2010 of 16 percent, adjusted for inflation and population growth. If discretionary grants, which account for about one-third of domestic discretionary budget authority, share proportionately in these cuts and if cuts in non-Medicaid mandatory grants are proportionate to cuts in non-Medicaid mandatory entitlement programs, the recurring annual cut in these grants by 2010, in real per capita terms, would be the equivalent of about a 4 percent cut in state government tax revenue. Put in perspective, that would be a permanent drop in state government revenue that is almost as large as the cyclical tax revenue drop of the 1990s recession and a little less than half as large as the tax revenue decline in the recent fiscal crisis. These are large enough to get the attention of state governments, particularly since there would be no reason to expect grant revenue to bounce back in later years. The Council of State Governments

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Medicaid Cuts and Restructuring13 The president has proposed $45 billion in net federal Medicaid savings over the next 10 years, reflecting $60 billion of cuts and $15 billion in new initiatives. Most of the federal savings would result in higher costs to states, but some would result in state savings, for a net cost to states of $34 billion over 10 years. The largest changes that would provide savings to states include reductions in payments Medicaid will make to pharmacies and provisions that would make it harder for people seeking to enter nursing homes to shield assets from Medicaid. The largest changes that would shift costs from the federal government to states include limits on intergovernmental transfers (IGTs can allow states to increase federal reimbursement without increasing expenditures), limits on administrative expenditures, and restrictions on case management expenditures. The president’s budget also proposed to increase outreach to and coverage of children, increasing federal and state expenditures. All told, Medicaid changes appear likely to increase state Medicaid expenditures by about 2–3 percent over 10 years.

Federal Tax Reform Perhaps the largest risk is the possibility that the federal government will enact a major overhaul of the federal tax system, adopting a retail sales tax, a consumption tax or a value-added tax. Whatever the merits of these changes for the federal tax system and the nation’s economy, all of these choices could create major—and largely undiscussed—problems for state and local government finances. Depending on very important details, these proposals could (a) eliminate the deductibility of state and local income and property taxes, raising the effective cost of state and local services and having dramatically different impacts across states, (b) tread into the traditional state-local terrain of sales taxes, making it difficult for state and local governments to raise revenue from these taxes, (c) make it impractically expensive for states to have their own income taxes if federal tax changes are in place of the existing federal income tax, and/or (d) raise the costs to states of maintaining and improving infrastructure, if municipal bond interest is no longer tax-exempt.

Conclusions The recent recession is behind states, and state revenue is recovering. However, tax revenue fell so sharply during the recent fiscal crisis that despite economic recovery and recent tax increases, real per capita revenue remains below its prior peak in 70 406

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percent of the states. States have raised taxes by far less in this crisis than in the prior one, and cut spending by more. They also drew down fund balances by more, and have relied heavily on tobacco bonds and other nonrecurring revenue. The net result is that many states still face budget gaps and are likely to need more spending cuts or tax increases to bring revenue and spending into balance. As states continue to work their way out of this hole, they will confront spending pressures from their own citizens and economies, and fiscal risks from actions to reduce the federal deficit. Medicaid is now the largest state spending area, and restraining price and utilization of health care will remain difficult. In addition, the impending growth in the elderly population also will place pressure on Medicaid over the next decade, and sooner in many Southwestern and Mountain states. States will face pressure to raise spending on elementary and secondary education in an effort to achieve higher standards, and will face labor market and demographic demands for additional spending on higher education. Federal budget cuts will add to fiscal pressures states face. The president’s FY 2006 budget proposed cuts in discretionary grants and mandatory grants other than Medicaid that are the equivalent of about a 2.4 percentage point drop in tax revenue in 2006, and could grow to the equivalent of about a 4 percentage-point drop—almost as large as the tax revenue drop in the 1990 recession, but presumably permanent. The federal budget also would cut Medicaid, exacerbating fiscal pressure on the states. Finally, if the federal government overhauls the federal tax system by moving toward a consumptionbased tax, it could make it extremely difficult for state and local governments to raise revenue. Debates over federal tax policy have so far paid very little attention to tax reform’s impact on state and local governments. While the recovery in tax revenue is welcome news for state governments, they will need this revenue growth and more, or cuts in spending, to keep budgets in balance in coming years.

Notes 1 For this purpose, I do not adjust for legislative changes because I am interested in how much states can spend – revenue states actually collect. 2 General fund expenditures are a reasonably good indicator of spending supported by taxes and other revenue states raise from their own sources (excluding federal aid). Arguments can be made for alternative measures of state-

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BUDGET financed spending, but all have their flaws and I find this measure preferable for the purpose here. 3 Operating expenditures actually increased by 14 percent in nominal terms, but that is not a good measure of underlying pressures because it does not take into account the fact that prices and population have increased since 2000. Real per capita expenditures is a better measure. 4 See Elizabeth C. McNichol, “State Fiscal Crisis Lingers,” Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, Revised February 15, 2005. 5 For an analysis of recent Medicaid spending growth, see John Holahan and Ghosh Arunabh, “Understanding the Recent Growth in Medicaid Spending, 2000 to 2003,” Health Affairs Web Exclusive, January 26, 2005. 6 A more meaningful but less intuitive way to look at the data is to examine the change in the elderly population as a share of the total population. This does not alter in any significant way conclusions about which states will face pressures soonest, so I present the simpler approach. 7 Stephen Heffler, Sheila Smith, Sean Keehan, Christine Borger, M. Kent Clemens and Christopher Truffer, “U.S. Health Spending Projections for 2004–14,” Health Affairs—Web Exclusive, February 23, 2005. 8 Andrew Reschovsky and Jennifer Imazeki, “Financing Education So That No Child Is Left Behind: Determining the Costs of Improving Student Performance,” Developments in School Finance 2003, (National Center for Education Statistics, 2004). 9 John D. Feerick, E. Leo Milonas and William C. Thompson, Report and Recommendations of the Judicial Referees, Supreme Court of the State of New York, Campaign for Fiscal Equity, Inc., et al., vs. The State of New York et al., Index No. 111070/93, Honorable Leland DeGrasse,

November 30, 2004. 10 Daniel E. Hecker, “Occupational Employment Projections to 2012,” Monthly Labor Review, (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, February 2004). 11 Based on Census Bureau data for FY 2002. 12 The Center on Budget and Policy Priorities has issued several reports on the impact of the federal budget on grants and on other domestic programs. This analysis is based on many of the same data sources as those analyses. There are two main reasons for differences in numbers between the analyses: I adjust for population growth, and I compare 2006 and later grants to grants in 2005 rather than to a projected baseline. Sources: Federal budget for FY 2006, unpublished OMB tables underlying federal budget, and Carlitz, Ruth, Domestic Discretionary Funding Levels for 2006 through 2010, Detailed Data, Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, February 28, 2005. 13 This section draws heavily on Victoria Wachino, Andy Schneider and Leighton Ku, Medicaid Budget Proposals Would Shift Costs To States And Be Likely To Cause Reductions In Health Coverage, (Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, February 18, 2005).

About the Author Donald J. Boyd is the director of fiscal studies at the Rockefeller Institute of Government of the State University of New York. His past positions include director of the economic and revenue staff for New York state’s budget office, and director of the tax staff for New York’s Assembly Ways and Means Committee. Boyd holds a Ph.D. in managerial economics for Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

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State Budgets in 2004 and 2005: The Long and Twisty Recovery By Nick Samuels In 2004, states turned an important corner on the road to fiscal recovery. Compared to previous years, revenue collections have recovered healthily, although they are not vastly surpassing budgeted estimates as they did in the late 1990s boom. The news isn’t all good, however. Expenditure pressures remain immense. Pent-up demand for spending in areas that were cut during the fiscal crisis still exists, while K–12 education and Medicaid battle each other to consume ever larger pieces of the budget pie. Federal budget deficits and their inevitable effect on domestic spending also will wear heavily on states as grants-in-aid are reduced or eliminated. Introduction After three years of dangling from a budgetary precipice, states gained firmer footing in 2004, pulling themselves over the fiscal edge, but still finding themselves on slippery ground. Following a dramatic revenue slide that served as the catalyst for a lingering fiscal crisis, state tax collections finally have started a meaningful recovery. That revenue decline and the budget trauma that it caused required states to make substantial spending cuts. But not every category of state spending was subject to those cuts equally. For both policy and political reasons, K–12 education was largely spared the budget axe. While states took considerable action to contain the everrising costs of Medicaid, as an entitlement they were limited in how much they could do, and policy and politics play here, too. States now face a different, less stark, but equally difficult budget dilemma than they have dealt with for the past three years, one on the expenditure side. During the period of fiscal stress, all budget players understood why the answer was “no.” Now, pent-up demand for spending in areas that suffered the brunt of cuts competes with requests for new spending, the desire to expand education spending, and with Medicaid and other health care costs. Furthermore, both the White House and Congress have put states on notice that, amid federal budget deficits and expensive policy priorities elsewhere, funds for states will decrease.

The Current State Fiscal Condition Revenues in Fiscal 2004 The state revenue picture brightened substantially in 2004, by several different measures. From a bud408

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getary perspective, revenues were healthy. In fiscal 2004,1 collections of sales, personal income and corporate income taxes surpassed originally budgeted estimates in 35 states, were on target in 10 and failed to meet expectations in only five states.2 In contrast, in fiscal 2002 at the depth of the state budget crisis, 42 states missed their revenue targets. While certainly good news, it should be noted that the 2004 revenue estimates had been tempered substantially compared to previous years when targets were missed continually. Indeed, while 2004 collections beat budgeted estimates, they didn’t by much; sales taxes were 0.5 percent higher, personal income taxes were 1.7 percent higher, and corporate income taxes were 7.8 percent above estimates. Overall, 2004 revenue collections beat budgeted projections by 1.6 percent. From the standpoint of final revenue collections in 2004, states finally had a year of substantial growth. According to the Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, state general fund tax revenue grew by 7.5 percent in fiscal 2004 in nominal terms, compared to the previous fiscal year.3 When adjusted for both inflation and legislated tax changes, growth was 3.2 percent. Again, both figures contrast sharply with previous years. The Rockefeller Institute figures indicate that nominal tax growth was –5.7 percent in fiscal 2002, or –7.8 percent on an adjusted basis, and 1.8 percent in fiscal 2003, or an adjusted –3.5 percent. Looking at collections of individual taxes further underscores the extent of the recovery. Personal income taxes—the revenue source that fueled the late 1990s budgetary boom—decreased by 10.8 percent in fiscal 2002, according to the Rockefeller Institute, and by 2.0 percent in fiscal 2003, but in fiscal 2004 grew by 8.4 percent. In fiscal 2002 the corporate income tax declined by a

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BUDGETS whopping 18.2 percent, while growing by 11.7 percent and 11.2 percent in fiscal years 2003 and 2004, respectively. The sales tax, which had nearly flat growth of 0.2 percent in fiscal 2002, increased by 1.8 percent in fiscal 2003 and by 6.6 percent in fiscal 2004. Revenues in Fiscal 2005 Since the fiscal crisis began in 2001, states have used tax and fee increases (in tandem with expenditure cuts and the use of reserve funds) to balance their budgets. The budgets states enacted for fiscal 2005 continued this trend. Twenty-four states increased taxes and fees for fiscal 2005 (and 11 decreased them), for a net change of $3.5 billion. Also as in recent years, most of the enacted increase ($888.4 million) comes from cigarette and other tobacco taxes. Those taxes, combined with increases in the sales tax ($710.6 million) and in the “other” tax category ($707.7 million) account for just less than two-thirds of the net fiscal 2005 enacted increase.4 In response to the fiscal downturn, states began increasing taxes in fiscal 2002, when they enacted a small $300 million increase. But in fiscal 2003 and 2004, enacted increases totaled $8.3 billion and $9.6 billion, respectively (the combined fiscal 2002–2005 enacted increase is $21.7 billion). This follows a pattern laid down during good or bad budget times. For example, during the economic slowdown in the late 1980s and early 1990s, states increased taxes by $43.6 billion (between fiscal 1988 and fiscal 1994). States gave most of that back as the economy turned around and through the late 1990s boom: between fiscal 1996 and fiscal 2001, states enacted $33.1 billion in tax decreases. State Spending in 2004 Amid improved revenues and with some caution, state spending increased slightly in fiscal 2004, although they still face significant spending pressure. The fiscal year after the revenue slide began was perhaps the harshest for states: in 2002, 38 states made post-enactment budget cuts that totaled a net $13.7 billion. (In fiscal 2003, 40 states made budget cuts that totaled $11.8 billion.) By comparison, 15 states were forced to make cuts in their fiscal 2004 budgets, by $2.2 billion. Among the strategies that states used to balance their budgets were layoffs of state employees (in two states), furloughs (two states), and early retirement incentives (one state).

Six states made across-the-board percentage cuts to their budgets. The net result of these actions in fiscal 2004, in budgetary terms, was a 3.0 percent nominal increase in state general fund spending, a 0.3 percent increase when adjusted for inflation. The comparison to the previous fiscal year again is a bold one. In fiscal 2003, state general fund spending grew by 0.6 percent nominally, a 2.4 percent decrease in inflation-adjusted terms. In fiscal 2002, the nominal and real figures were 1.3 percent and –1.4 percent, respectively. Based on appropriations for fiscal 2005, state general fund spending will increase by 4.5 percent nominally and 1.8 percent in real terms. While spending shrank in nine states in fiscal 2004, only three states budgeted for less spending in fiscal 2005. Three states had spending growth of 10 percent or more in fiscal 2004 and appropriated budgets in eight states do in fiscal 2005. Medicaid and Other Health Care Medicaid continues to burden state budgets heavily. (It is the means-tested entitlement program that provides medical care for more than 50 million low-income individuals, and which is financed 57 percent by the federal government and 43 percent by the states.) In fact, Medicaid has grown so quickly that in fiscal 2004 it is estimated to have become the largest single functional category of state spending, accounting for 21.9 percent of the total (including general funds, other state funds, federal grants-inaid, and bonds). The other categories of total state spending in fiscal 2004 are: elementary and secondary education (21.5 percent); higher education (10.5 percent); public assistance (2.1 percent); corrections (3.4 percent); transportation (7.9 percent); and all other (32.6 percent). Total estimated fiscal 2004 state spending from all sources is estimated to be $1.2 trillion. Indeed, the effect of Medicaid’s rapid growth is to crowd out other categories of states spending, forcing them to become smaller wedges of the state budget pie, even if spending on those functions (such as K–12 education) increases. Furthermore, in times of fiscal stress such as the one states are currently emerging from, the dominance and nature of Medicaid and K–12 education, the two largest state spending functions, magnify budget cuts in other areas. With cuts to K–12 education and Medicaid both difficult from a policy and political perspective, balancing the budget weighs more heavily on the remaining categories. The result is that 100 percent of the budget must be balanced on less than 100 perThe Council of State Governments

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BUDGETS cent of the total. Overall, health care plays a major role in state budgets. Including Medicaid, health care accounts for approximately 31 percent of all state spending. For fiscal 2001 (the most recent year for which figures are available), Medicaid accounted for 69.2 percent of all state health spending. Other categories were: the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (1.2 percent); state employee health care (8.3 percent); health care in the corrections system (1.3 percent); higher education health (2.0 percent); direct public health care (2.8 percent); community-based services (5.6 percent); state facility-based services (3.0 percent); population health expenditures (6.3 percent); and insurance and access expansion (0.4 percent).6

several factors will complicate this. Perhaps the most major is the certainty of less assistance from the federal government. With on-budget deficits of more than $400 billion projected each year through 2010,9 and the president’s proposed budget reflecting a 3 percent decrease in domestic discretionary spending, states can expect decreasing federal aid. Particularly worrisome to states are various Medicaid proposals, which may grant states more flexibility to manage their programs, but also may cost them more in the long-run as they absorb assorted costs. Additionally, states have unfunded pension obligations to confront, and courts in several states, hearing education equity lawsuits, may force states to make unplanned spending increases.

Other Indicators The fiscal downturn also took a heavy toll on the state credit market. Between 2001 and 2003, negative changes in state credit ratings and negative outlook and review actions far outweighed positives ones. The improving fiscal situation in 2004 has changed that. According to Moody’s Investors Service, of 19 state rating or outlook changes in 2004, all but two were positive, and included upgrades for four states.7 But pressure still remains. “Despite signs of improvement, states have yet to return to the revenue expansion or fund-balance levels they experienced before the 2001 recession,” says Moody’s. “States must replace non-recurring measures used in recent years to balance their budgets.”8

Notes

The Near Future The near future for state budgets is brightening, but also will provide state leaders with many difficult decisions. After a lengthy period of scrambling with post-enactment budget cuts, significant pentup demand exists to restore spending. Important and popular programs absorbed decreases in their budgets during the economic ebb and now want those funds restored, not to mention increased. However,

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1 The fiscal year in 46 states begins in July and ends in June. The exceptions are Alabama and Michigan, where the fiscal year runs October–September, New York, where it is April–March, and Texas, where the fiscal year runs September–August. Twenty states budget biennially. 2 National Association of State Budget Officers, The Fiscal Survey of States, (NASBO, December 2004), 9. 3 Nelson A. Rockefeller Institute of Government, State Fiscal Brief, (February 2005), 2. 4 See note 2 above. 5 National Association of State Budget Officers, 2003 State Expenditure Report, (NASBO, September 2004), 8. 6 National Association of State Budget Officers, 2000– 2001 State Health Care Expenditure Report, (NASBO, Fall 2003), 3. 7 Moody’s Investors Service, 2005 Outlook for State Ratings: Sector Revised to Stable from Negative, (February 2005), 5. 8 Ibid. 9 Congressional Budget Office, CBO’s Current Budget Projections, (March 2005).

About the Author Nick Samuels is a senior fiscal analyst at the National Association of State Budget Officers.

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State Tax Collections: Eroding Tax Bases By William F. Fox and LeAnn Luna Both a slow economy and tax policies contributed to the recent state fiscal crises. Tax rate increases and one time revenue sources can solve temporary budget deficits, but maintaining the integrity of income and sales tax bases is necessary to prevent structural deficits. Extending the sales tax to selected services, participating in the Streamlined Sales Tax Project, and requiring corporate combined reporting are among the potential solutions discussed by the authors. Introduction The recent state budget crises forced many states to take a fresh look at their entire fiscal structure. In numerous cases, the solution to the budgetary shortfalls amounted to little more than stopgap measures, including “temporary� sales tax increases and depleting rainy day funds to meet ordinary operating expenses and more exotic steps such as sale/leaseback agreements for public facilities. 1 Unfortunately the focus on short-term solutions may keep states from dealing with underlying structural deficits. Legislators, with a view towards long-term fiscal stability, need to better understand the fundamental attributes of their revenue sources, why some of their tax bases continue to erode, and some options for stemming the erosion. Imposition of broad, non-discriminatory tax bases with low rates is a basic tenet of almost all good tax systems. A tax system with these attributes will often accomplish the related goals of fairness, administrative efficiency, economic neutrality and revenue sufficiency. Broad bases and low rates help ensure that business competition, and not taxes, determines winners and losers, reduce the incentives to structure business transactions to fit tax-advantaged exceptions written into the tax code, and increase the likelihood that the tax system provides sufficient revenues over the long term. Unfortunately, many recent state practices are inconsistent with these goals. This article will begin with a review of the recent performance of state taxes. Next we will examine the extent and causes of declines in the corporate income and sales tax bases, followed by various state responses to the base declines. Finally, the essay will conclude with a discussion of federal legislation implications and tax policy recommendations.

Revenue Trends State tax revenues in 2002 comprised the lowest share of personal income in more than 15 years (see Figure A), as revenues declined by 4.4 percent in 2001 (see Figure B). This is the only decline in nomi-

nal state tax revenue since at least 1970. Inflationadjusted tax revenues have fallen in other years, but the real 2002 decline is also much greater than during any other year. State revenues rebounded only slightly in 2003, increasing by about 2.1 percent in nominal dollars. Much of the meager growth in 2003 is attributable to rate increases. The personal and corporate income taxes declined in 2002 as the sales tax grew very slightly. The largest decline was in the corporate income tax (20.7 percent), followed by the personal income tax (10.7 percent). Such large declines certainly created difficulties for states, particularly since the degree to which tax revenues fell was unexpected in most states. Only the individual income tax continued to fall in 2003 (2.0 percent). The declines were obviously due in part to economic conditions, but state tax structures also played a part. Economists term the rate of growth of tax revenues divided by the rate of growth of state personal income as revenue elasticity.2 An elasticity greater than one means tax revenues grow faster than the economy, an elasticity of one means that revenues grow at the same rate as the economy, and an elasticity below one means that tax revenues grow more slowly than the economy. States can select certain low elasticity tax instruments as long as the necessary set of fast growing instruments is chosen as well. Tax revenues in the average state have grown more slowly than the economy during the past decade, as evidenced by elasticities lower than one for all taxes except the individual income tax (see Table A).

Declining Tax Bases Corporate Income Tax Base Erosion The corporate income tax base has been eroding for many years. The effective corporate income tax rate has fallen by about one-third since the late 1980s, even as the simple average nominal tax rate rose about 0.1 percent.3 Thus, the effective tax rate decline must be substantially the result of an eroding The Council of State Governments

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Figure A: U.S. State Tax Revenue as a Percent of Personal Income, 1989–2003 6.9 6.7

Percent

6.5 6.3 6.1 5.9 5.7 5.5 89

90

91

92

93 94

95 96

97

98

99

00

01

02

03

Year Source: US Bureau of the Census and author calculations.

taxable base relative to actual corporate profits. Three primary factors have contributed to this trend: legislated base changes, federal tax base shrinkage and tax planning. The federal tax base decline accounts for as much as 30 percent of corporate tax erosion. The corporate tax structure in almost every state begins with the federal definition of profits so state tax bases move with the federal base. For example the bonus depreciation provisions enacted in 2002 and 2003 have had a dramatic impact on taxable income in those states that did not decouple from federal deprecation rules.4 The deductibility of stock options for tax purposes has also reduced the corporate income tax base relative to book income, although those deductions should generally be offset by an increase in the personal income tax base. Several types of legislated exemptions have narrowed the base. Tax competition among states for increasingly mobile businesses has resulted in a variety of state tax concessions. Tax breaks targeted at selected firms and concessions built into the tax code that are intended for all firms are granted in essentially every state.5 For example, numerous states have reduced the corporate income tax liability of many firms that are intensive exporters out of state (such as many manufacturers), by altering the traditional three-factor apportionment formula to emphasize the sales factor. The traditional three-factor formula, which placed equal weight on property, payroll and sales, is now the exception rather than the rule, with over two-thirds of the states at least double weighing the sales factor. Thirteen states have sales factors that exceed 50 percent and nine states have a 412

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single sales factor apportionment formula for at least some taxpayers (Fox et al, 2005). Many states also, perhaps unwittingly, allow tax planning to erode corporate income tax bases as they permit each firm to separately report their income tax liability. Separate reporting can allow related companies to shift income into low tax or no tax states through a variety of strategies. For example, many businesses exploit the passive investment company (PIC) loophole by forming a PIC in states, such as Delaware, that either exclude intangible income from taxation or levy low rates. The PIC imposes a fee on related operating entities that is allowable as a deduction in many separate reporting states (See Luna 2004). Companies can also manipulate transfer prices between related firms, or charge inter-company management fees and interest expense to move profits from one state to another. Corporations have become more adept at exploiting differences in tax structures to minimize their taxes. Many exploit the protections provided by P.L. 86-272 and use multiple entities to avoid nexus in some market states. The emergence of limited liability companies (LLCs) as a viable entity for large businesses also provides tax avoidance opportunities. Sales Tax Base Erosion The sales tax base has been declining relative to personal income for decades. The base has fallen from about 51.4 percent of personal income in the average state in 1979 to 41.5 percent in 2001. The decline can be attributed to four basic causes: cross border shopping, technological changes, legislated exemptions and changing purchasing patterns.6

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Figure B: U.S. State Tax Revenue Growth 1989–2003

Percent

10 8 6 4 2 0 -2 -4

-6 -8 -10 89

90

91

92

93 94

95

96

97

98

99

00

01

02

03

Year Source: US Bureau of the Census and author calculations.

The recent dramatic growth in remote sales (e.g. mail order and electronic commerce) continues to cause erosion of the sales tax base. Although every sales taxing state has an equivalent use tax on remote purchases, the failure of the seller to collect the tax allows for rampant tax evasion. Bruce and Fox (2004) estimate that states lost $15.5 billion in 2003 from inability to collect tax on Internet sales, and the losses are growing rapidly. Perhaps surprisingly, even business customers commonly fail to remit use taxes owed. For example, the state of Washington (2003) found the use tax to have a 27.9 percent non-compliance rate for registered business taxpayers, by far the greatest of any tax. Interestingly, non-compliance was greatest for the largest firms, which are those with over $50 million in receipts. Compliance is nearly non-existent for individuals except for a few items like automobiles that must be registered with the state. Nineteen states have added a line item on their individual income tax returns for voluntary reporting of use taxes or have begun to provide compliance information with the return (Manzi, 2003), but compliance rates and collections are both negligible. The Internet and other technological advances have affected the sales tax base beyond the facilitation of remote sales. The technologies have created a number of new services that are not contemplated in most sales tax statutes, such as on-line subscriptions, email, instant messaging and on-line gaming. States have legislated many new exemptions in recent years, particularly in years when tax revenues

were growing very rapidly. For example, Missouri and Georgia recently exempted food from the sales tax, bringing the number of exempting states to 30. Six states currently exempt some clothing from the sales tax, and an additional 12 states offer sales tax holidays (generally during the back-to-school season) on items such as clothing.7 A variety of reasons have been used to justify the exemptions including equity, economic development and administrative convenience. A careful analysis of new exemptions would probably lead to the conclusion that some represent good tax policy and others do not, but the net effect is to narrow the base. For example, exemptions that exempt large classes of business to business transactions are likely to be good policy while those that exempt select categories of consumer purchases are likely to create adverse effects. Finally, the consumption of services continues to grow rapidly, as evidenced by services increasing from 47.4 percent of consumption in 1979 to 58.8 percent in 2002. The relative transition from consumption of goods to services erodes the base since most goods are included in the tax base (with the notable exception of food for consumption at home) and most services, and particularly professional and construction services, are exempt. The effects of declining goods consumption have been less pronounced than they might otherwise have been because food for consumption at home accounts for about one-half of the reduction in goods, meaning one untaxed set of transactions has tended to replace another set in many states. The Council of State Governments

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How are States Responding? Many states have historically used higher rates, and particularly for the sales tax, to offset base erosion. The result is that the median state sales tax rate was 3.25 percent in 1970, 4.0 percent in 1980, and 5.0 percent in 1990. The number of sales tax rate increases has slowed, but there are now 20 states (out of 45 sales taxing states) with at least a 6.0 percent state sales tax rate. During recent years states have been less likely to increase rates on broad tax bases than in the past, though some have raised the sales or income tax and many have raised tobacco taxes. Higher tax rates are generally not a good solution to eroding tax bases, though they may replace the revenue losses. Maintaining broad tax bases is a more effective state policy and many states have sought to limit eroding tax bases in two ways: general solutions to underlying problems and fixes for specific problems. Examples of more general solutions are combined reporting for the corporate income tax and the Streamlined Sales Tax Project (SSTP) for the sales tax. Fixes to specific problems include legislation that attacks particular avoidance techniques, such as anti-PIC legislation. Narrow solutions often permit other forms of tax planning. Corporate Income Tax Many states have enacted anti-PIC legislation to prevent the shifting of expenses to low tax or no tax states (Dennehy and Ehrlich, 2004). For example, 12 states deny deductions for royalties and interest paid by the “related” operating company to the holding company. However, the laws are written in different ways and are often very narrow, meaning the impacts of the add-back provisions on tax planning will differ across states and in some cases may achieve relatively little. For example, many states have different definitions of what constitutes a “related party,” using ownership rules that range from 30 percent to 80 percent and vary de-

Table A SELECTED U.S. TAX ELASTICITIES, 1992 TO 2003 Tax

U.S. average

Total ..................................... General sales ...................... Selective sales ..................... Individual income .............. Corporate ............................

0.91 0.96 0.83 1.00 0.48

Source: U.S. Bureau of the Census and author calculations.

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pending on the type of entity that owns the stock (e.g., individual, partnership, or corporation). Furthermore, many state statutes only require an addback of royalty expense, allowing corporations to deduct other forms of payments, such as interest expense and management fees. In addition, Arkansas requires the add-back of “intangible expense” but does not define the term, leaving the definition open to interpretation. Also, North Carolina denies royalty payments for the use of trademarks, which permits related corporations to transfer any other intangible, such as a patent, copyright or trade name to the PIC, and create nowhere income on the intercompany payments. Tennessee’s legislation only requires reporting of the related-firm transactions, leaving any add-back to the discretion of the Department of Revenue. Some states have asserted that the presence of intangible assets in the operating entity’s domicile creates taxable nexus for the PIC licensor. Others evaluate transactions between affiliated companies for a valid business purpose or argue that they lack economic substance. Several states also have powers similar to Internal Revenue Code Section 482, which authorizes the tax department to use its discretion to adjust income and deductions necessary to make a fair and reasonable determination of the amount of tax liability. While these solutions are more comprehensive than limited restrictions on specific inter-company transactions, they still place the burden on the revenue departments to not only find the abuse but interpret statutes. More involvement by the courts will be necessary to settle interpretation disputes. State efforts to slow revenue losses caused by the increased use of LLCs are similarly varied. Unless the state imposes an entity-level or withholding tax on LLC profits, the profit passed through to corporate members may escape tax altogether, particularly if the corporate member is domiciled in a no-tax state or a state such as Delaware that does not tax income from intangible investments. Tax avoidance is possible because the law is currently unclear whether simply owning an interest in an LLC creates nexus for the member if that is its only presence in the state. Several states have passed LLC entity-level taxes or withholding taxes in response to this type of tax planning. Currently, 23 states have adopted a throwback rule, in an attempt to lessen nowhere sales that result when the shipping entity has no nexus in the market state (e.g. because of PL 86-272 protection) or where the market state imposes no income tax. Throwback rules require that non-taxed sales be thrown back to the state of origin and included in both the numerator and denominator for apportionment purposes. The effect

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FINANCE is to make those otherwise nontaxable sales (“nowhere income”) subject to tax in the home state at that state’s rate. Throwback rules, however, have several policy shortcomings. First, the imposition of throwback rules by only a few states prevents use of the throwback state for tax planning but does not prevent planning from other states. In addition, the throwback rule imposes additional tax on corporations producing in the home state but selling out of state. Finally, the higher tax burden in the home (production) state encourages firms to move. Combined reporting for related entities involved in a unitary business is a more comprehensive solution towards combating corporate income tax erosion. In general, combined reporting ignores the existence of separate entities and taxes the business on its combined income, regardless of corporate form. The advantage of combined reporting is that transfer prices and inter-company charges (e.g., management fees, royalties, and interest) are irrelevant in the tax calculation because the expenses are effectively eliminated in combination. The expectation is that combined reporting will increase overall state corporate income tax revenues, although a particular business could owe more or less, depending on the income and losses of the members of the unitary group (e.g. if one entity has a taxable loss, combining the operations of that entity with a profitable company allows for the immediate use of operating losses.) Combined reporting is not a perfect solution because only worldwide combined reporting will prevent the use of non-U.S. PICs for tax planning. Further, there are uncertainties about what entities are part of a unitary operation. There are few bright-line tests other than ownership, and states can come to different conclusions regarding which entities must be included in the combined report. Also the courts in California and elsewhere have issued varying opinions on how to treat related entities without nexus in the home state.8 Sales Tax States can prevent sales tax base erosion by broadening the base to include selected services, avoiding tax concessions and exemptions, and aggressively pursuing taxpayers with nexus in their state. Participation in the SSTP also offers great potential to stem the lost revenues on remote transactions. Many states are aggressively pursuing out-of-state taxpayers regarding nexus compliance. States are forming revenue agency compacts to share information and to coordinate the collection and audit activities among states in a region. The Southeastern As-

sociation of Tax Administrators, with 12 member states and eight associate member states, is one of the largest compacts in the country. The Great Lakes region and Midwest have also formed compacts. States are sending nexus questionnaires to registered businesses, and others are increasing state audit staff and the number of audits conducted. For example, North Carolina’s Project Compliance added 39 audit positions and increased revenues from audits by $40 million during FY 2004. The project estimates 46 new positions for FY 2005 with $75 million additional revenue collections. South Carolina plans to add 100 new audit positions by the end of FY 2005. Some states, such as Mississippi and Missouri, are enticing non-compliant taxpayers with amnesty programs. Others are publishing the names of noncompliant taxpayers on Web sites in an attempt to shame taxpayers to pay taxes. New Jersey and Pennsylvania have gone as far to have “nexus cops”— policemen placed on the highway to conduct roadside stops and interviews of truck drivers to try to identify business activities that would constitute nexus in their states. Over the past several years, the states have undertaken the SSTP in cooperation with the business community in an effort to find a mechanism through which vendors can be required to collect the use tax on remote transactions. The SSTP offers great potential to simplify the sales tax and increase tax collections. The Quill case was decided on commerce clause grounds that the compliance costs for multi-state vendors exceed those for single state vendors. Therefore, the SSTP’s intent is to simplify sales and use tax compliance to the point that compliance burdens for remote and local vendors are similar and any effects on interstate commerce are eliminated. The National Governors Association reports that 20 states have passed legislation in compliance with the Streamlined Sales Tax Agreement that grew out of the SSTP, though not all states may have fully complied with the agreement. Economists view the SSTP as an attempt to enforce a destination-based sales tax. The conventional wisdom has been that destination-based consumption taxes are less distorting than origin-based structures (which exist if remote sales cannot be taxed).

Federal Legislation Future federal legislation has significant implications for state tax base erosion. On the sales tax front, legislation authorizing the SSTP agreement offers the greatest potential for allowing states to The Council of State Governments

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FINANCE maintain their tax bases. Congress recently extended the Internet Tax Freedom Act for the second time and eroded the sales tax base further by broadening the moratorium to all forms of access to the Internet. Federal legislation can also be important for corporate income taxation. For example, the just enacted Job Creation Act of 2004 includes a wide variety of tax breaks for business taxpayers along with the closing of some previously available “loopholes.” P.L. 86-272 limits the ability of states to assert income tax nexus on companies selling tangible goods with only a marketing presence in their state. H.R. 3220 is a pending bill with significant congressional support that expands P.L. 86-272 protection to other activities, such as sales of intangibles and services, and essentially requires a physical presence standard for any state tax on income. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit in Cuno v. DaimlerChrysler Inc. recently ruled that tax credits offered by the state of Ohio to encourage DaimlerChrysler to expand its operations in Toledo violated the Commerce Clause of the Constitution. If the decision withholds almost certain scrutiny by the U.S. Supreme Court, many seemingly routine tax incentives used by states could be ruled invalid. The prospect for federal legislation to permit such tax concessions has already been raised.

Conclusion The fiscal crises recently suffered by many states were in part self-inflicted because of tax policy decisions that allowed sales and income tax bases to erode. The traditional response to a short term fiscal shortfall is often to raise rates and delay spending. A better long-term solution is to work towards broader income and sales tax bases that allow for both lower overall rates and for collections to grow with the economy.

4 Approximately 34 states now do not follow federal depreciation rules. 5 Some overlap exists between these two groups. In some cases, states build a discretionary concession into the code but describe the characteristics of qualifying firms so narrowly that only one or a very small number of firms could possibly obtain the concession. 6 See Fox (1988, 2003) for further discussion of these points. 7 See the Federation of Tax Administrators Web site at www.taxadmin.org. 8 Under the Finnigan approach, the sales of all members of the unitary group are included in the numerator for apportionment purposes. Under the Joyce approach, the sales of related entities without nexus in the filing state are excluded from the numerator.

References Bruce, Donald and William F. Fox. 2004. “State and Local Sales Tax Revenue and Losses from E-Commerce: Estimates as of July 2004,” State Tax Notes,33(7): 511-518. Dennehy, Edward K. and Stephen E. Ehrlich. 2004. “PICing Away at Passive Investment Companies: States Enact Legislation to Curtail Revenue Losses,” State Tax Notes: 33(11): 777-783. Fox, William F. 1998. “Can the Sales Tax Survive a Future Like its Past?” in The Future of State Tax Policy, edited by David Brunori, Urban Institute Press. Fox William F. 2003. “History and Economic Impact of the Sales Tax,” in Sales Taxation, Edited by Jerry Janata, Institute for Professionals in Taxation, forthcoming. Fox, William F., LeAnn Luna, and Mathew N. Murray. 2005. “How Should a Tax on Multistate Business Be Structured?” National Tax Journal, LVII, No. 1, `139-159. Luna, LeAnn. 2004. “Corporate Tax Avoidance Strategies and Solutions.” Journal of Multi-State Taxation and Incentives, 14(2): 6-17, 46-48. Manzi, Nina. 2003. “Use Tax Collection on Income Tax Returns in Other States.” Policy Brief, Minnesota House of Representatives Research Department. State of Washington. 2003 “Department of Revenue Compliance Study,” Research Report #2003-1.

About the Authors Notes 1

Careful execution of a strategy to place revenues in a rainy day fund during periods of high revenue growth and to spend them in lower growth time periods can be part of a sound fiscal policy. 2 The growth in revenues not adjusted for rate changes is often termed buoyancy rather than elasticity. 3 The effective tax rate is total state corporate income tax revenues divided by total corporate profits. Corporate profits are based on U.S. Department of Commerce national income accounts data.

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William F. Fox is William B. Stokely Distinguished Professor of Business and director of the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Tennessee. He is past president and recipient of the Steven D. Gold Award from the National Tax Association. LeAnn Luna is an assistant professor of Accounting and research assistant professor in the Center for Business and Economic Research at the University of Tennessee. Prior to receiving her PhD in accounting from the University of Tennessee, she worked as a tax consultant for an international public accounting firm.

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Fundamental Federal Tax Reform and the States By W. Bartley Hildreth State and local governments face significant impacts from fundamental federal income tax reform, including new budget costs and the effective loss of revenue choices. It is hard to pin down the precise nature of these implications prior to congressional action. At the least, any discussion of federal tax reform legislation deserves careful scrutiny by state and local officials because there are significant fiscal federalism implications. On January 7, 2005, President George W. Bush issued Executive Order 13369 establishing the President’s Advisory Panel on Federal Tax Reform. This nine member panel, all appointed by the president, has the challenge of providing, by July 31, 2005, “revenue-neutral” policy options for reforming the Federal Internal Revenue Code. While major reforms such as a flat tax or a National Retail Sales Tax (NRST) are possibilities, the executive order requires that at least one option “should use the federal income tax as the base for its recommendation.” The panel’s proposals should simplify the tax laws, handle equity issues in “an appropriately progressive manner,” and promote “long run economic growth and job creation.” Interestingly, policy options should continue “recognizing the importance of homeownership and charity in American society.” This last point emphasizes that tax reform, in whatever form, is unlikely to challenge the mortgage interest deduction and the deduction for charitable contributions. However, all other tax preferences, such as the state and local tax deductions, are not sacrosanct. Accordingly, this article explores the ramifications for state (and local) governments given the serious discussion for fundamental federal income tax reform during the 109th Congress. The president’s call for tax reform was not greeted with widespread public support.1 Although public attitudes can shift and the details of any legislation can deviate from the basic forms, there are clues to how such reforms can impact states. As Table A outlines, states are likely to find that major federal tax reform weakens their current state tax structures, increases borrowing costs, and, if that was not enough, imposes a new budget cost—actual payment of a federal tax. Wrapped up in the debate over tax reform, moreover, is the ongoing question of the appropriate size of government at all levels. Therefore, it is in the interest of state (and local) officials to understand the basics of the tax reform discussion. Since there are many reform ideas under discussion, the follow-

ing sections sketch only the most basic elements of the reform proposals and their likely impact.2

Tax Reform Objectives Tax reform proposals generally have three tax objectives: (1) to tax consumption instead of savings; (2) to achieve a lower and more uniform tax rate; (3) and to broaden the tax base. The task is to achieve these objectives while achieving a revenue-neutral result, meaning that the new tax system should generate the same amount of revenue as the tax system it replaces. Otherwise, reform advocates would have to explain how they would cut federal spending to accommodate lower revenues. While some reformers assert that tax reform could spur economic growth sufficient to offset any revenue loss, the emerging concern over federal deficits appears to mute that argument. Basic alternatives to the current income tax system are either the flat tax or the NRST, although there are variations of each that will not be dealt with here. Both reforms are essentially consumption taxes. Conceptually, all productivity activity accrues income to someone. Income is either consumed or saved. Thus, the only difference between income and consumption is savings, as shown by the following formulas: Income = Consumption + Savings Consumption = Income – Savings Both the flat tax and the NRST, as consumption taxes, explicitly remove savings from taxation. By exempting savings, the tax base is smaller than it would be under an income tax system that taxed consumption and some savings. Since reformers also desire low and uniform rates, the taxation of consumption has to be as broad as possible. Each exemption makes it more difficult to preserve the desired low tax rate. Currently, the federal income tax system—as detailed in the Internal Revenue Code (IRC) that governs the IRS—is a hybrid of both an income tax and a consumption tax. The IRC defines taxable income, The Council of State Governments

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Table A: Impact of Fundamental Federal Income Tax Reforms on State and Local Government Budgets National retail sales tax Expenditure Impose a federal tax on state & local government services Impose a federal tax on state & local wages and salaries Impose a federal tax on state & local non-cash compensation

★ ★ ...

Borrowing Eliminate tax exempt securities Increase cost of borrowing Increased interest cost changes the financial ability to do capital projects Imperil debt covenants and pledged revenue security Revenue: Income tax Loss of federal tax deduction Loss of federal tax definitions upon which state income tax depends Loss of federal-state sharing of tax information to promote tax compliance Decline in public willingness to support state & local income tax Revenue: Sales and use tax Loss of federal tax deduction Sticker shock when consumer adds federal tax to state & local tax rates Higher combined tax rates increase incentive for consumers to avoid and evade tax Decline in public willingness to support state & local sales tax Revenue: Property tax Loss of federal tax deduction Decline in house prices (at least in the short run) which reduces the property tax base Decline in public willingness to support state & local property tax

★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Source: W. Bartley Hildreth. Key: ★—Yes . . . —No

including all or part of earned wages and salaries as well the taxable parts of so-called “unearned” income—e.g., interest, dividends and capital gains. However, the tax code permits some income to be tax-deferred (e.g., IRAs, 401(k) plans, and employerprovided pensions) or even tax-exempt altogether (e.g., the interest earned on tax-exempt state and local government securities). Tax reform proposals go further by exempting savings. Why? From an economic perspective, the answer is to reward individual savings and to gain macroeconomic benefits derived from having more pri418

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vate capital to invest in a market economy. Taking a political perspective, some reformers want to completely do away with the IRS as we know it; a new tax scheme is one way to accomplish that objective.

The National Retail Sales Tax Flat tax

A national retail sales tax would operate similarly to current state sales tax sys... tems. In fact, most reforms call for the states to administer the federal tax, ... thereby eliminating the IRS. Adopting a ★ sales tax would reduce the number of tax returns from the 130 million individuals ★ filing IRS Form 1040s in 2003, to a much ★ smaller number because businesses (and ★ government, as clarified later), rather ★ than individuals, would have the responsibility to collect and remit the tax. This ★ does not mean, however, that the economic burden would shift from individu★ als to business. Indeed, the economic bur★ den would remain on individuals. Rather, ★ the required tax remittance and reporting would shift to the business. In a posi★ tive view, individuals would be saved from the administrative cost of compli... ance. From a negative view, indirect ... taxes make it difficult for a taxpayer to ★ estimate his or her true tax burden (termed a fiscal illusion). ★ While the same rate of taxation would apply to all consumption, the percentage ★ of income that is consumed (and thus ★ subject to taxation) varies greatly. Lower income households spend a greater percentage of their incomes on consumption than families with higher income, especially for the basic necessities of life. Higher income taxpayers have more discretionary income, and save more. Reform proposals recognize these realities by incorporating a rebate (or credit) based on the poverty level and processed by the Social Security Administration.

The Flat Tax on Consumption Generally, proposals for a flat tax on consumption incorporate both a personal tax and a business cashflow tax. For individuals, the personal tax is termed a wage tax. One wage tax proposal defines earned income as “paid in cash and which is received during the taxable year for services performed in the

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FINANCE United States.” This definition excludes interest, dividends, capital gains, stock options, and perhaps even bonuses, since such payments are received after year-end. Individuals, for example, would not pay federal tax on interest and dividends, because that money would already be taxed at its source. Individuals would get to reduce their earned income by the following: all savings (in most proposals); a personal exemption for each family member; and, a limited number of deductions. President Bush instructed his tax reform panel to respect the deductions for mortgage interest expenses and charitable contributions. This is another way of saying that political realities hinder pure base broadening. Every deduction or exemption, however, restricts the tax base and forces up the tax rate under a revenue-neutral goal. A flat tax on all forms of business would replace the corporate income tax. Currently, non-corporate businesses (e.g., partnerships and limited liability companies) pass business income through the personal tax returns of the owners. By removing this preference for non-corporate businesses, all businesses would pay a flat tax on the value added after subtracting the following: the materials and services that are the inputs to the production process; the complete expensing of investments in the year made; wages paid in cash; and, employer-provided pensions. The calculation looks like this: Consumption = Sales – Inputs – Investments – Wages – Pension Benefits. This form of tax structure is known as the subtraction form of the “value-added tax,” as utilized by Canada, Japan and other countries. A business is allowed to subtract the cost of the inputs paid for property and services. Furthermore, the business would expense all investments in the year of purchase, thereby avoiding the current depreciation method. Because the business would not pay tax on cash wages paid, each wage recipient would owe the personal wage tax on those amounts. While flat tax proposals permit businesses to deduct payments for retirement contributions on behalf of employees (because doing so promotes the savings goal), proposals do not give the same tax advantage to employerprovided health care benefits (since health care is viewed as consumption). By this logic, both the business and the employee would have an incentive to minimize health care costs. Also, there is no deduction for property, income or payroll taxes paid.

Impact of Change Prior to his appointment as the current director of

Table B: What is the NRST Quoted Tax Rate? Example Retail price Tax due based on a national retail sales tax rate of 30 percent Cost to consumer Quoted rate

Tax-exclusive rate

Tax-inclusive rate

$100

$100

$30 $130 30/100 (30%)

$30 $130 30/130 (23%)

Source: W. Bartley Hildreth

the Congressional Budget Office, economist Douglas Holtz-Eakin concluded: “In simple terms, federal tax reform is simultaneously the reform of each state and local government tax system.”3 Accordingly, there are more reform impacts than can be examined in this overview. Generally, both tax reform proposals would terminate the deduction for state and local property and income taxes (and, as provided in a 2004 law, the optional sales tax deduction). Reformers view these deductions as another form of consumption. The logical conclusion is that voters will exercise conservation. Specifically, high-tax taxpayers will have an incentive to move away from high-tax areas. Under a NRST, governments (and nonprofits) are considered consumers, and therefore, taxed. In the case of a government enterprise that charges endconsumers, such as a water system, the NRST could be included on the bill and remitted to the federal government. For general government activities supported by general taxes, however, the government jurisdiction itself would be responsible for paying the tax on purchased items. In addition, as a “taxable employer,” state and local governments would have to pay an equivalent tax on wages and salaries. These two features—a tax on purchases and a tax on wages—result in a new expenditure line-item in every state and local government budget: payment of national tax. Interestingly, there is an exemption for education expenditures in most proposals because education is considered an investment rather than current consumption. The flat tax would impose a federal tax on the noncash compensation paid to public employees. There would not be any tax due on wages paid in cash or for retirement contributions, but all other forms of benefits, such as health care expenses by the employer, would be taxed as a form of consumption. Again, this would require a new lineThe Council of State Governments

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Figure A: Per Capita Fiscal Impact of the National Retail Sales Tax on State and Local Governments, Divided by the Mean 3

2.5

2

1.5

1

0

DC New York *Alaska Massachusetts Minnesota California Maryland Delaware Oregon Connecticut Hawaii *Ohio Wisconsin New Jersey *Nebraska *Colorado Maine *North Carolina Pennsylvania Rhode Island Michigan *Kentucky *Virginia *Georgia *Utah Vermont *Illinois *Indiana *South Carolina *Iowa *Kansas *New Mexico *Missouri *Oklahoma *West Virginia *Montana *Alabama *Idaho *North Dakota *Wyoming *Arkansas *Louisiana *Mississippi *Arizona Washington *Tennessee New Hampshire *Florida *Nevada *South Dakota *Texas

0.5

Source: Ways & Means Staff Computations (D. Rogers), from Census data for 2001–2002.

item in the public budget (at a rate of 19 percent by one proposal). State sales (and use) taxes would face a significant impact from a NRST. To effectively serve as the tax administrator for the NRST, each state would need to adopt the national sales tax base definition as its own. Conceivably, this could expand the base to include remote sales (e.g., mail-order and internet activity) which currently escapes, for the most part, state tax nexus. Also, the national sales tax base would define as taxable many items that heretofore had been exempted from the income tax base, such as employer-provided health insurance, new house sales, and purchases by federal, state and local governments. While base-broadening is laudable, there is little, if any, evidence to suggest that national lawmakers are any less susceptible than their state counterparts to the insatiable demand to carve out tax exemptions. As exemptions proliferate, the NRST could become as complex (and narrow) as the current state systems. What is the NRST rate that will achieve revenue neutrality? Offsetting only federal income tax collections would require a sales tax rate of 26.8 percent, based upon the assumptions used by Bill Gale of the Brookings Institution in 2004.4 Offsetting all 420

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federal taxes including the payroll tax would require a 60.7 percent tax. It gets more complicated because the rates can be quoted like the current retail sales tax (termed a tax-exclusive rate) or the income tax (the tax-inclusive rate), as demonstrated in Table B. Gale’s estimates, but on a tax-inclusive rate, translate into a 21 percent rate to offset only the income tax and 37.8 percent for all federal taxes. For comparison, a prominent NRST legislative proposal in the past Congress (the “FairTax”) asserted that a 23 percent tax-inclusive rate (the same as a 30 percent tax-exclusive rate) would offset all federal taxes. Voter support for existing state taxes may decline after federal tax reform. Sticker-shock is likely when consumers have to pay a double-digit NRST rate on top of a combined state and local sales tax rate that itself can reach almost 10 percent. As a result, voters may rethink their support for state and local taxation, especially sales taxes. The flat tax carries its own negative impact because businesses would no longer be able to deduct, as a business expense, state and local tax payments, and, as a result, may be less likely to support state tax policy. Voluntary compliance may be impacted. High combined sales tax rates may increase “off the book” sales. If this happens, states may face less

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Figure B: Using the Property Tax to Cover the Fiscal Impact of the National Retail Sales Tax, Divided by the Mean 2.50

Index Property Tax

2.00

1.50

1.00

0.00

*Alabama Delaware Hawaii *New Mexico *Arkansas *Kentucky *Oklahoma DC *Louisiana *West Virginia *North Carolina *Utah California Oregon New York *Mississippi Maryland *Missouri *Alaska Minnesota *Georgia *Ohio *South Carolina Pennsylvania *Idaho *Tennessee *Colorado *Virginia *Nebraska Michigan Massachusetts *Arizona *Kansas *North Dakota *Indiana *Iowa Wisconsin *Montana Washington *Nevada Rhode Island *Illinois Connecticut Maine Vermont *Florida *South Dakota New Jersey *Wyoming *Texas New Hampshire

0.50

Source: U.S. Census data for 2001–2002.

reliable collections, thereby jeopardizing the balanced budget. Although state sales taxes, for the most part, exempt business production inputs, the NRST would exempt all purchases made in furtherance of a bona fide business purpose to produce taxable activity. This broader exemption, while consistent with economic logic saying businesses do not bear the ultimate tax burden, reduces the tax base. Specifically with regard to the property tax, property values are expected to decline due to the loss of the mortgage interest deduction and the deduction for real estate taxes. Moreover, the NRST is imposed on new home sales. An open question is whether interest rates will decline enough to offset the expected reduction in property values (of up to 20 percent).5 Voter support for the property tax may decline as a result. Adoption of a NRST would eliminate the federal income tax system and, therefore, make it difficult for states to continue their own income tax system. Most states rely heavily on the IRC to define taxable income, and enter into extensive data exchange with the IRS to promote tax compliance. Absent the federal income definitions, states would have to articulate their own definitions, and back it up with audit

protocols, to overcome the loss of the details from individual and business income tax records. Under fundamental federal tax reform, all forms of investments, including bonds, would generate taxexempt interest, thereby removing the preference given to the current municipal bond market. By losing their ability to borrow at a (tax-exempt) rate lower than U.S. Treasury (taxable) securities, state and local governments would end up borrowing at a higher rate than the U.S. Treasury. This result is the case in Canada where provincial and municipal governments face borrowing rates up to one full percentage point (100 basis points) higher than their federal government because they all borrow at taxable rates. Accordingly, states would pay more to borrow money after tax reform. Tax reform advocates, however, claim that an increase in aggregate personal savings will provide individuals with more money to invest, which, in turn, will drive down the overall cost of capital, therefore allowing state and local governments to borrow at lower rates than possible even with (the eliminated) tax-exempt bonds. This assumes, however, in part, that demand for state and local government securities does not weaken as the tax-advantages are removed. In terms of budget decisions, an increase in borrowing cost makes capital The Council of State Governments

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FINANCE investments less attractive than labor-intensive services. Moreover, debt covenants may be imperiled, specifically in regards to pledged revenue security and coverage ratios.

Comparative Impacts What are the state-by-state impacts of a 30 percent tax-exclusive NRST? One straight-forward estimate is to tally, by state, certain new costs and revenues losses.6 Specifically, the NRST would impose a direct budget cost on all state and local end-consumer current operations and capital outlays, except for education services which would be exempt from taxation as a form of investment instead of consumption. Additionally, the NRST is expected to cause states to lose their ability to continue corporate and personal income taxes due to the loss of federal tax conformity. Adding together both of these new costs and revenue losses, and then adjusting each state’s results by population, produces a per capita fiscal impact index that is normed by the mean of the series so that 1 equals the average index amount. As shown in Figure A, the less impacted states (at about half the average fiscal impact) are states without a personal income tax system while states at the other extreme (at over 1.5 times the average fiscal index) are states, and the District of Columbia, that rely extensively on the income tax. There are distinct differences, also, when viewed by the most recent presidential election (an asterisk denotes states where President Bush received a majority of the votes in 2004). Moreover, if there is sticker-shock such that states are unable to turn to the sales tax to offset these new costs and income tax revenue losses, then, arguably, the pressure will fall to the property tax. Adding together both new costs and revenue losses, and dividing by the state’s existing property tax reliance, yields a property tax impact index that is normed by the mean of the series so that 1 equals the average index amount. As shown in Figure B, the results are less striking when viewed by the last Presidential election because the highest affected states are those that currently place little reliance upon the property tax (at over 1.5 times the average state). These figures may be sobering, but they convey only a narrowly defined set of impacts of fundamental tax reform, leaving out, for instance, the increased cost of borrowing and other implications.

Summary Presented almost as an afterthought in a review of the benefits of tax reform, the 2005 Economic Re422

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port of the President makes the following disclosure: Finally, tax reform could impose large transition costs on state and local governments. Some tax reform proposals call for repeal of Federal income taxes. Since most state income taxes rely on the Federal tax as a starting point, states would either have to find another source of revenue or administer their income taxes on their own. Other proposals would impinge on the traditional state reliance on sales taxes by adding a Federal tax on this base.7 This statement is only the tip of the iceberg. State and local budgets (and debt) face significant impacts from fundamental federal income tax reform, including new budget costs and the effective loss of revenue choices. It is hard to pin down the precise nature of these implications prior to congressional action. At the least, any discussion of federal tax reform legislation deserves the careful scrutiny by state and local officials because there are significant fiscal federalism implications.

Notes 1 For example, the mid-November, 2004, national poll by the New York Times and CBS News found that only a quarter of respondents favored a flat tax rate. Similarly, the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll in December 2004 found the same results for a national consumption or sales tax, while a majority favored the existing tax system. 2 Material consulted include: The Economic Effects of Comprehensive Tax Reform (Congressional Budget Office, 1997); Comparing Income and Consumption Tax Bases (Congressional Budget Office, 1997); Impact on State and Local Governments and Tax-Exempt Organizations of Replacing the Federal Income Tax (Joint Committee on Taxation, 1996); and, Robert Strauss, “Federal Consumption Taxes: Implications for the State and Local Sector,” State Tax Notes, March 15, 1999. Various institutions and groups have material on the Web. 3 Douglas Holtz-Eakin, “Fundamental Tax Reform and State and Local Governments,” National Tax Journal, 49:3 (September 1996), 475–86. 4 William G. Gale, “A Note on the Required Tax Rate in a National Retail Sales Tax: Preliminary Estimates for 2005–2014” (August 2004). Accessed: http://www.brook. edu/views/papers/gale/20040812.htm. 5 Gravelle, Jane G. “Effects of Flat Taxes and Other Proposals on Housing,” Congressional Research Service Report for Congress (June 1996); but see “Fundamental Tax Reform and Residential Housing Values,” Donald Bruce and Douglas Holtz-Eakin, Journal of Housing Economics, 8:4 (1999), 249–71. 6 Based on the suggestion of Diane L. Rogers of the U.S. House Ways and Means Committee staff, and using Cen-

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FINANCE sus data for 2001–02. 7 Economic Report of the President. (Council of Economic Advisors, February 2005), 81.

References Esenwein, Gregg A. and Jane G. Gravelle. “The Flat Tax, Value-Added Tax, and National Retail Sales Tax: Overview of the Issues,” Congressional Research Service Report for Congress (September 24, 2004). “Fundamental Tax Reform: Possibilities and Problems: A Symposium,” National Tax Journal, 49:3 (September 1996), 317–500. Hildreth, W. Bartley and James A. Richardson, eds. Handbook on Taxation. (New York: Marcel Dekker, Inc., 1999). Huffman, Gregory W. and Evan F. Koenig, “The Dynamic Impact of Fundamental Tax Reform, Part 2: Extensions,” Economic and Financial Review (Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Second Quarter 1998), 19–31. Slemrod, Joel, with Jon Bakija. Taxing Ourselves: A Citizen’s Guide to the Great Debate over Tax Reform. (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1996). Slemrod, Joel. ed. Tax Policy in the Real World. (New

York: Cambridge University Press, 1999). Strauss, Robert P. “The Effects of a Flat Federal Consumption Tax on the States,” State Tax Notes, February 26, 1996, 649–659. Strauss. Robert P. Further Implications of a Federal Consumption Tax for State and local Tax Administration. State Tax Notes, October 14, 1996, 1085–94. Viard, Alan D. “The Transition to Consumption Taxation, Part 2: The Impact on Existing Financial Assets,” Economic and Financial Review (Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, Second Quarter 2001), 20–31. Zodrow, George R. and Peter Mieszkowski, United States Tax Reform in the 21st Century. (New York: Cambridge University Press, 2002).

About the Author W. Bartley Hildreth is the Regents Distinguished Professor of Public Finance in the Hugo Wall School of Urban and Public Affairs and the W. Frank Barton School of Business at Wichita State University. He specializes in municipal securities and state and local finance. He has chaired the Governor’s Tax Review Committee and has served on the board of the Kansas Development Finance Authority.

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Trends in State Retirement Systems By Frank T. Baumgardner Systems are battling back utilizing new plan structures, alternative investments, and corporate activism to improve their fiscal positions. The recent recession and current demographic trends have had a serious impact on state-administered public employee retirement systems. This article will present information about the current condition of state-administered public employee retirement systems, the problems they face, and the solutions they are employing. Introduction State-administered public employee retirement systems are among the largest institutional investors in the world. There are currently 218 state systems in the United States with a total 21.2 million active and inactive members. They command a total of $1.8 trillion in retirement assets, making them major players in the financial markets. Public employee retirement systems were founded as a means of social welfare, similar to Social Security, to provide public servants with sufficient retirement income. The recent recession and current demographic trends have had a serious impact on state systems. With systems seeing an erosion of their financial position, many are looking at alternative investments and increasing their role in corporate governance to help them return to a fiscal stability that will enable them to meet future obligations. This article will present information about the current condition of state-administered public employee retirement systems, the problems they face and the solutions they are employing.

Overview The number of state-defined benefit public employee retirement systems (218) has shown modest growth recently. Over the past decade, the number of state administered public employee retirement systems has grown by 28 from the 190 in fiscal year 1993. These new systems usually extended state retirement benefits to new classes of employees, such as local law enforcement personnel, legislators or judges. Membership in a state-administered public employee retirement system is not limited to state employees; in fact, local governments employ more than two-thirds of the active employees covered by state systems. In 2003, local government employees were 69.5 percent, or 8.7 million, of the total 12.5 million state system active members. State system assets totaled $1.8 trillion in fiscal year 2003, or just over 83.2 percent of the total $2.2 trillion held by all public employee retirement sys424

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tems that year. These assets were distributed across several asset classes, but more than three-fifths were concentrated in corporate stocks or other securities: Corporate stocks were worth $665.6 billion (36.9 percent) Other securities, which include investments held in trust by other agencies, mutual funds, foreign and international securities, conditional sales contracts, and other securities classifications totaled $442.6 billion (24.6 percent) The remaining $694.5 billion in assets (38.5 percent) were distributed across a variety of other investments including corporate bonds, federal government securities, mortgages, real estate holdings and savings deposits.

System Size State-administered public employee retirement systems are very large organizations. Ninety of the 218 systems had membership greater than 25,000 in 2003. The six largest systems individually had membership greater than the population of Wyoming (507,000) and the combined membership of the 10 largest (7,800,000) exceeds the population of Virginia (7,500,000).1 The 10 largest systems and their memberships were: California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS) (1,480 thousand) Texas Teachers Retirement System (1,080 thousand) New York Public Employees Pension and Retirement System (964 thousand) Florida State Management Services Retirement System (892 thousand) Ohio Public Employees Retirement System (797 thousand) California Teachers Retirement System (CalSTRS) (720 thousand) Virginia Employees Retirement System (505 thousand) Wisconsin Employees Retirement System (487 thousand)

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Table A Percent Distribution of Assets in State Public Employee Retirement Systems: Fiscal Years 1997, 2002 and 2003 2003

2002

1997

Corporate stocks Total other securities (a) Corporate bonds Federal governmental securities

Asset Class

36.9% 24.6 14.4 10.1

36.9% 21.8 16.3 10.2

34.8% 20.3 15.2 18

Cash and short-term investments Mortgages held directly Total other investments (b)

4.4 1.2 8.5

5.1 1.1 8.6

4.7 1 6.1

Key: (a) Total Other Securities includes: investments held in trust by other agencies, securities of state and local governments, foreign and international securities, shares held in mutual funds, conditional sales, contracts, direct loans, loans to members, etc. (b) Total Other Investments includes: real property, venture capital, partnerships, real estate investment trusts, and leverage buy-outs.

North Carolina Teachers and State Employees Retirement System (469 thousand) Michigan Public School Employees Retirement System (468 thousand) In addition to their large membership, state systems administer an enormous wealth of funds. An annual compilation of retirement fund data by Pensions & Investments magazine shows state-administered public employee retirement systems hold 7 of the top 15 spots in the world when ranked in terms of total retirement asset holdings. The top six in membership cited above hold more retirement assets than major corporations such as GE, IBM, Boeing, Verizon, Ford, AT&T or Daimler Chrysler.2 Membership and assets are concentrated in the largest systems. The largest 21 of the 218 systems accounted for 56.4 percent of total membership of all state systems in fiscal year 2003. These same systems also control 58.1 percent or $1,047.7 billion of the total $1,802.7 billion state retirement system assets. The concentration of such large asset holdings in these top systems has made them very important players in the corporate world. Over the last several years, many systems have shown an increasing interest in influencing the direction of corporate boards.

Membership State-administered public employee retirement systems had 21.2 million members in 2003, a 3.1 percent increase from 2002. Total membership has grown by 6.0 million or 39.5 percent over the past

decade, while active membership increased 2.3 million (22.6 percent) and inactive membership increased 1.8 million (127.2 percent) over that period. Of the current 21.2 million members, 12.5 million are active members, 5.4 million are current beneficiaries, and 3.3 million are inactive members. Active members are employees who currently contribute to the system while inactive members are former employees or employees on military or other extended leave who retain retirement credits in the system.

Receipts State-administered public employee retirement systems are funded in three ways: Current active members of systems (employees) pay contributions. Governments (employers) also make contributions Fiduciaries invest the system assets and earn returns on investment. Total receipts for fiscal year 2003 were $130.0 billion. Earnings on investment constituted 52.5 percent ($68.2 billion) of total receipts, government contributions made up 28.5 percent ($37.0 billion), and employee contributions the remaining 19.1 percent ($24.8 billion). Fiscal year 2003 did see a turnaround on investment earnings, which were $68.2 billion compared with the prior fiscal year’s net loss of $63.5 billion. Even so, the 2003 figure was far less than the prerecession levels that routinely averaged in the hundreds of billions of dollars. Employee and government contributions both increased in fiscal year 2003. Employee contributions grew 7.7 percent from $23.0 billion to $24.8 billion. Government contributions grew by a much larger margin, from $32.0 billion to $37.0 billion, or just over 15.4 percent, in the same period.

Payments and Other Outlays Total state retirement expenditures, or outlays, for 2003 were $109.0 billion, an 11.1 percent increase from 2002 ($98.2 billion). There are three types of outlays: benefit payments, withdrawals, and administrative and miscellaneous payments. The largest outlay, benefit payments, totaled $98.8 billion for fiscal year 2003, an 11.4 percent increase from the 2002 level ($88.7 billion). Benefit payments made up 90.6 percent of total outlays for the year. Withdrawals accounted for 3.9 percent of outlays, totaling $4.2 billion, and increased 29.6 percent from the prior year ($3.3 billion). Administrative and miscellaneous expenses constituted the remaining 5.5 The Council of State Governments

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RETIREMENT percent of total outlays, totaling $6.0 billion, a decrease of 3.6 percent from 2002 ($6.3 billion).

Beneficiaries and Monthly Benefit Payments There were a total 5.4 million beneficiaries of stateadministered public employee retirement systems in fiscal year 2003. This is an increase of 4.6 percent over the prior year. Of those, 85.6 percent (4.6 million) were retired on account of age or service, 6.3 percent (342,000) were retired on account of a disability, and 8.0 percent (436,000) were survivors of deceased former active members. These numbers increased by 4.3 percent, 6.5 percent, and 7.3 percent respectively from the prior year. Monthly benefit payments averaged $1,449 for 2003, an increase of 5.5 percent from the previous year. These payments varied widely across the country. Retirement systems in Connecticut averaged the highest ($2,112), followed by Wisconsin ($2,075) and Colorado ($2,055), while systems in Iowa ($846), Indiana ($827), and Kansas ($822) had the lowest. Many factors influence these numbers including cost of living, inflation, and the composition and number of beneficiaries. Average benefit payments have consistently exceeded inflation rates over the past decade putting increasing pressure on systems. The ratio of annuitants to active members increased to 43.2 percent in 2003 from 41.8 percent in 2002. This number likely will continue growing as the baby boomers begin to retire. The increase of the annuitant-to-active-member ratio has far-reaching implications on funding.

Receipts Compared with Payments Systems must increase their funding reserves each year to cover future liabilities. These liabilities grow along with membership and inflation, so systems work to ensure a net inflow of funds to meet their future financial commitments. Receipts exceeded payments in fiscal year 2003 by $20.9 billion. This is in contrast to 2002 when funds showed a net outflow of $106.7 billion. Although the net outflow in fiscal year 2002 damaged the financial position of the systems, several prior years showed very large net inflows of funds averaging in the hundred billions of dollars. This is not to say that the large net outflow in 2002 was not significant: it was, however, it is important to remember that retirement system fiduciaries and actuaries plan for the cyclical nature of the business cycle and have built assumptions into their plans to buffer against it. 426

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Investments and Assets Total asset holdings of state-administered public employee retirement systems for fiscal year 2003 were $1,803 billion, up from $1,775 billion in 2002. These assets were distributed across several classes, as seen in Table A. The distribution of assets in 2003 was largely unchanged from the prior year. The percentage of cash and short-term investments, corporate bonds, and total other investments decreased slightly while the percentage of total other securities increased proportionately. Comparing 2003 to1997 highlights the redistribution of assets from traditional asset classes to other types of securities. Although the percentage distribution of most asset classes held relatively stable over the period, total other securities increased sharply while federal government securities decreased significantly. The systems are investing larger proportions of their funds in alternative asset classes such as: investments held in trust by other agencies, securities of state and local governments, foreign and international securities, shares held in mutual funds, conditional sales, contracts, direct loans, loans to members and the like. There are several possible reasons fund managers are opting for some reallocation— low interest rates; the downturn in the stock market; emerging markets abroad; and opportunities in private equity offering growth opportunities.

Current Issues Funding considerations dominate discussions concerning public employee retirement systems. System administrators must earn consistently high yields to keep up with their actuarial liabilities. Poor investment returns require systems to either increase employer contributions or limit benefits, both difficult measures. The recent stock market decline, changing demographics, and the increasing costs of health care have placed considerable burden on retirement systems, making it difficult for some to keep up with their actuarial liabilities. As in the private sector, some state governments are considering switching retirement structures from defined benefit to defined contribution to minimize the government’s exposure to market risk. Others are utilizing alternative investments and increasing their role in corporate governance to ensure they reap maximum returns on their investments. This section will address the funding problems now facing systems, the alternative benefit structures they are considering, and some of the

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RETIREMENT alternative investment solutions they are employing. Funding Levels Most public pensions are pre-funded, meaning assets for retirement benefits accumulate during a participants pre-retirement years.3 An actuarial funding level can be used to gauge a pre-funded plan’s health. This is calculated by dividing the plans assets by its liabilities for accrued benefits. A fully funded pension plan has assets equal to its liabilities and a ratio of 100 percent. A system whose assets are less than its liabilities is underfunded. This does not mean that the system will not be able to meet its benefit obligations, but that it will need more funding to meet them in the long term. The Public Fund Survey, conducted annually by the National Association of State Retirement Administrators (NASRA), showed a significant decrease recently in the actuarial funding level for the 125 state retirement systems included in the survey: 91.1 percent in 2003, down from 96.3 percent in 2002, and 100.9 percent in 2001.4 The research director for NASRA cited two factors causing the drop in this ratio: the declining equity market and the generous benefit enhancements of the late 1990s.5 Other factors related to system funding issues are increasing life expectancy and underpayment by the government, especially during times of fiscal stress and rising health care costs. With many systems providing health care benefits to their retirees, this is becoming an important financial factor since healthcare costs are growing rapidly and are difficult to predict. In fact, The Economist magazine reports that the future burden of healthcare costs could easily be as great as the cost of pensions.6 Changing demographics exacerbate these problems. Systems have more retirees, who are in turn living longer, increasing the ratio of annuitants to active members. Annuitants typically require more service than active members, increasing administrative expenses and placing a strain on funding. More annuitants also require plans to be more liquid to be available to pay benefits, inevitably placing assets in less lucrative classes leading to smaller returns.7 Defined Benefit and Defined Contribution Plans Due to the financial problems defined benefit plans are now facing, both public and private sector employers are examining alternative structures to relieve their pension burdens. These include defined contribution plans, such as 401(k)s, and hybrid systems. In a defined benefit retirement plan, the payments

an employee receives upon retirement are defined by an agreement between the employer and the employee. In a defined contribution plan, the contributions the employee and employer make are defined; however, the end retirement benefits depend upon the growth of the contributions rather than an agreed upon allotment. Defined benefit plans have several advantages for employees. Primarily, they shift the market risk to the employer, which gives employees greater financial stability in retirement. In addition, many plans protect against inflation by earmarking benefit payments to some measure such as the Consumer Price Index. There are also disadvantages for the employees; since these systems are typically structured to reward longer service, the rules of defined benefit plans usually hinder a member’s mobility. Employers benefit by offering defined benefit retirement plans because their stability helps attract and retain a quality workforce and increase diversity.8 This comes at a financial cost, however, since employers take on the market risk. Defined contribution plans offer employees more career mobility and greater control over their retirement planning. Smart investing and saving could provide greater returns; however, because professional fiduciaries rather than individual members administer defined benefit plans, members in defined contribution plans typically earn lower rates of return.9 Employees also shoulder the market risk so their benefits are not guaranteed. Defined contribution plans effectively shift the market risk from the employer to the employee, a major advantage for employers. Since defined contribution plans are often not as appealing to perspective employees, in a competitive employment market this can make attracting and retaining employees more difficult. Some private pension plans are developing hybrid systems, attempting to share the market risk between both the employer and the employee, which might be adapted by public systems in the future. GE, for example is developing a system that would allow defined contribution participants to invest their money in a fund which would mirror the GE defined benefit plan investment lineup and provide for a minimum 5 percent guaranteed return.10 Move to Alternative Asset Classes and Corporate Activism In addition to examining alternative retirement offerings, pension funds are turning to alternative The Council of State Governments

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RETIREMENT investments and corporate activism to ease their funding problems. Pensions and Investments magazine reported, “CalPERS moved approximately 17 billion to alternatives at the expense of traditional asset classes over the past three or four years.”11 This constitutes nearly 10.0 percent of its $170.7 billion in asset holdings. Other funds are considering similar moves into alternative investments. CalSTRS, for example, is considering hedging, emerging market bonds, and other non-traditional assets as a way to generate greater returns.12 State public employee retirement funds are also increasing their role in corporate governance to assure that businesses act in ways that best benefit the financial interests of the systems. This movement began in the early 80’s when CalPERS began publishing “focus lists” of companies with bad corporate governance.13 Fiduciaries have continued to take a growing interest in utilizing their shareholder rights. NASRA has asked the Securities and Exchange Commission to allow proxy voting reforms that will help them, “exercise the rights of shareholder ownership in order to promote the best economic interests of plan members and beneficiaries.”14 NASRA says, “(their) best alternative is to address problematic situations by improving the boards to reflect an appropriate shareholder perspective.” Perhaps the best-known recent example of a pension fund using its proxy rights to influence the direction of a corporate board occurred this year when CalPERS led a campaign against the Disney Corporation chairman and succeeded in stripping him of his role.15 With such large asset holdings, many of these systems control large portions of major corporations. It will be interesting to watch their influence on corporate governance over the next several years.

Author’s Note This article is released to inform interested parties of ongoing research and to encourage discussion of work in progress. The views expressed on technical issues are those of the author and not necessarily those of the U.S. Census Bureau.

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Notes 1 Table 1: Annual Estimates of the Population for the United States and States, and for Puerto Rico: April 1, 2000 to July 1, 2004 (NST-EST2004-01), Source: Population Division, U.S. Census Bureau, (Release Date: December 22, 2004). 2 Vince Calio, “Mega Funds,” Pensions & Investments, (September 20, 2004) P&I/Watson Wyatt World 300. Ranked by U.S. dollars, in millions. U.S. fund data is from the P&I 1000, published January 26; all other fund data as of December 31, unless otherwise noted. 3 Keith Brainard, “Public Fund Survey Summary of Findings FY 2003,” (September 2004). 4 Rob Kozlowski, “Funding levels for Public Plans fall in FY03,” Pensions & Investments, (November 1, 2004). 5 See note 3 above. 6 “Enough to live on,” The Economist, (March 25, 2004). 7 See note 3 above. 8 Gary W. Anderson and Keith Brainard, “Profitable Prudence: The Case for Public Employer Defined Benefit Plans,” (April 26, 2004). 9 See note 2 above. 10 Phyllis Feinberg, “DC offering linked to GE pension plan on the way,” Pensions & Investments, (August 9, 2004). 11 Christine Williamson, “CalPERS separates alpha, beta,” Pensions & Investments, (November 15, 2004). 12 Joel Chernoff, “CalSTRS joins hunt for alpha,” Pensions & Investments, (July 12, 2004). 13 “Profit huggers,” The Economist, (April 1, 2004). 14 Letter to Mr. Jonathan G. Katz, Secretary of Securities and Exchange Commission, from NASRA, December 22, 2003. 15 Paul R. La Monica, “Eisner out as Disney chair,” CNN Money, (March 4, 2004). http://money.cnn.com/2004/03/ 04/news/companies/disney/.

About the Author Frank Baumgardner is a statistician with the U.S. Census Bureau. He received a B.S. from Miami University in economics and decision sciences. He began his career with the U.S. Census Bureau in 2003 with the Governments Division where he focuses on state and locally administered public employee retirement system statistics.

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305,623 623,561 586,357 328,419 383,112

Massachusetts ................................ Michigan ......................................... Minnesota ....................................... Mississippi ...................................... Missouri ..........................................

224,470 310,268 682,299 51,818 442,717

248,881 370,132 370,998 87,678 330,647

Kansas ............................................. Kentucky ......................................... Louisiana ........................................ Maine ............................................... Maryland ........................................

Oklahoma ....................................... Oregon ............................................. Pennsylvania .................................. Rhode Island .................................. South Carolina ............................... See footnotes at end of table

97,831 96,025 932,817 367,980 281,651

Hawaii ............................................. Idaho ................................................ Illinois .............................................. Indiana ............................................ Iowa .................................................

188,306 1,333,418 697,775 43,447 1,531,223

357,275 190,727 58,344 891,754 602,377

Colorado ......................................... Connecticut ..................................... Delaware ......................................... Florida ............................................. Georgia ............................................

New Mexico .................................... New York ......................................... North Carolina ............................... North Dakota ................................. Ohio .................................................

326,639 94,676 433,703 166,596 2,397,755

United States ..................................

Alabama .......................................... Alaska .............................................. Arizona ............................................ Arkansas ......................................... California ........................................

103,820 71,133 112,623 74,484 705,187

21,209,882

State

Montana .......................................... Nebraska ......................................... Nevada ............................................. New Hampshire .............................. New Jersey ......................................

Total membership

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143,008 159,769 367,315 28,505 219,006

120,955 782,538 454,249 27,207 734,148

53,387 45,149 77,610 50,910 440,615

206,502 395,379 280,450 155,590 262,223

147,294 219,349 216,526 51,848 192,836

62,292 62,490 463,965 229,110 163,971

191,332 119,381 38,498 620,163 357,142

214,895 46,526 229,744 109,633 1,377,772

12,538,604

10,080 53,815 75,770 3,965 130,720

25,134 118,976 80,793 5,567 464,477

23,679 14,301 7,701 6,569 63,468

7,270 27,625 185,835 112,698 26,701

40,404 55,446 44,600 5,056 45,990

4,150 7,906 236,088 47,701 39,444

99,681 9,819 984 64,912 142,530

25,360 20,924 124,702 16,051 332,300

3,250,341

Total active Total inactive members members

71,382 96,684 239,214 19,348 92,991

42,217 431,904 162,733 10,673 332,598

26,754 11,683 27,312 17,005 201,104

91,851 200,557 120,072 60,131 94,188

61,183 95,337 109,872 30,774 91,821

31,389 25,629 232,764 91,169 78,236

66,262 61,527 18,862 206,679 102,705

86,384 27,226 79,257 40,912 687,683

5,420,937

Total (a)

60,716 91,526 210,478 16,737 74,958

38,066 376,664 135,947 9,327 268,914

25,267 10,962 23,814 13,958 182,084

82,891 169,774 108,171 48,277 81,824

57,307 91,006 89,479 24,533 75,235

28,546 23,397 194,008 71,522 76,145

56,126 53,602 13,763 186,427 82,871

74,348 24,479 72,434 34,552 528,124

4,642,902

Retired by service

5,955 5,158 12,662 1,569 10,559

1,414 24,722 12,589 387 34,704

688 342 1,329 1,261 0

2,962 9,360 4,178 3,986 2,057

316 2,427 6,475 1,853 5,585

1,184 418 3,343 6,638 1,086

7,966 3,519 2,155 12,211 8,957

6,135 558 5,562 3,207 79,130

342,286

Retired on disability

4,711 0 16,074 1,042 7,474

2,737 30,518 14,197 959 28,980

799 379 2,169 1,786 19,020

5,998 21,423 7,723 7,868 10,307

3,560 1,904 13,918 4,388 11,001

1,659 1,814 35,413 13,009 1,005

2,170 4,406 2,944 8,041 10,877

5,901 2,189 1,261 3,153 80,429

435,749

Survivors

Beneficiaries receiving periodic benefit payments

87,072,882 184,602,124 309,959,996 36,015,082 120,156,232

65,679,482 652,158,001 206,107,171 9,896,905 514,740,621

25,035,941 13,201,362 50,592,674 20,470,083 354,601,304

143,058,311 294,835,479 189,722,058 57,145,106 134,118,192

50,295,283 139,349,596 178,354,604 34,754,091 103,350,670

47,593,000 25,180,154 360,750,666 75,380,476 66,220,845

136,173,243 129,964,827 20,449,406 220,088,992 185,005,535

114,777,439 46,841,362 112,615,009 54,256,565 1,066,744,721

$7,852,487,401

Total (a)

Retired on disability

77,088,894 177,552,344 287,565,039 31,154,871 104,728,432

61,434,397 603,229,096 178,339,106 9,045,937 434,247,785

24,025,609 12,548,949 47,083,208 17,537,833 323,291,873

127,217,954 252,938,921 173,952,630 49,405,763 124,327,499

49,168,020 131,306,236 160,313,695 27,705,962 84,682,451

45,176,000 22,927,532 336,019,694 53,229,211 62,970,043

109,171,966 119,701,392 17,007,439 204,896,128 158,841,854

105,330,442 43,770,450 103,532,281 49,016,813 912,660,799

5,247,228 7,049,780 12,943,842 2,920,594 9,726,378

1,821,310 29,267,349 16,170,337 195,360 57,952,065

460,025 422,968 1,077,436 1,728,250 0

8,590,223 12,599,222 5,606,590 3,436,235 1,816,393

177,140 5,176,360 7,845,731 2,092,196 6,286,145

909,000 502,548 4,561,654 4,890,277 2,269,380

15,952,577 5,738,667 1,785,283 9,191,932 11,945,269

5,142,580 933,249 6,777,887 3,458,470 112,877,244

$7,013,919,983 $462,604,657

Retired by service

4,736,760 0 9,451,115 1,939,617 5,701,422

2,423,775 19,661,556 11,597,728 655,608 22,540,771

550,307 229,445 2,432,030 1,204,000 31,309,431

7,250,134 29,297,336 10,162,838 4,303,108 7,974,300

950,123 2,867,000 10,195,178 4,955,933 12,382,074

1,508,000 1,750,074 20,169,318 17,260,988 981,422

11,048,700 4,524,768 1,656,684 6,000,932 14,218,412

4,304,417 2,137,663 2,304,841 1,781,282 41,206,678

$375,962,761

Survivors

Periodic benefit payments for the month (dollars)

TABLE B MEMBERSHIP AND BENEFIT OPERATIONS OF STATE-ADMINISTERED EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT SYSTEMS, LAST MONTH OF FISCAL YEAR: MARCH 2003

1,220 1,909 1,296 1,861 1,292

1,556 1,510 1,267 927 1,548

936 1,130 1,852 1,204 1,763

1,558 1,470 1,580 950 1,424

822 1,462 1,623 1,129 1,126

1,516 982 1,550 827 846

2,055 2,112 1,084 1,065 1,801

1,329 1,720 1,421 1,326 1,551

$1,449

Average monthly benefit payment

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63,934 304,196 1,635,614 150,095 41,035 504,796 356,359 107,171 486,819 55,317

State

South Dakota .................................. Tennessee ........................................ Texas ................................................ Utah ................................................. Vermont ..........................................

Virginia ........................................... Washington ..................................... West Virginia .................................. Wisconsin ........................................ Wyoming ......................................... 311,811 216,709 64,319 263,500 33,893

35,114 198,917 1,176,389 94,833 23,837 84,227 29,545 14,436 107,032 5,529

12,379 22,158 134,880 23,280 7,683

Total active Total inactive members members

Source: U. S. Department of Commerce, U. S. Census Bureau, December 2004. Key: (a) Detail may not add to totals due to rounding.

Total membership

108,758 110,105 28,416 116,287 15,895

16,441 83,121 324,345 31,982 9,515

Total (a)

91,583 93,165 28,416 108,292 14,087

13,546 71,595 293,784 31,982 8,193

Retired by service

15,609 5,027 0 6,572 243

394 4,227 14,984 0 623

Retired on disability

1,566 11,913 0 1,423 1,565

2,501 7,299 15,577 0 699

Survivors

Beneficiaries receiving periodic benefit payments

132,228,706 148,256,556 37,556,750 241,267,880 15,384,080

15,977,083 76,720,000 496,621,797 42,311,610 8,847,449

Total (a)

112,118,000 127,574,483 37,556,750 223,631,200 13,984,974

14,250,385 69,550,000 450,815,452 42,311,610 7,982,581

Retired by service

19,108,000 5,639,167 0 16,357,961 329,024

339,051 2,256,000 30,593,711 0 436,569

Retired on disability

1,002,706 15,042,906 0 1,278,719 1,070,082

1,387,647 4,914,000 15,212,634 0 428,299

Survivors

Periodic benefit payments for the month (dollars)

TABLE B MEMBERSHIP AND BENEFIT OPERATIONS OF STATE-ADMINISTERED EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT SYSTEMS, LAST MONTH OF FISCAL YEAR: MARCH 2003 – CONTINUED

1,216 1,347 1,322 2,075 968

972 923 1,531 1,323 930

Average monthly benefit payment

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218

100.0 86.0 6.2 7.8

85.6 6.3 8.0

5,180,415 4,453,077 321,346 405,992

100.0 60.3 39.7

20,575,129 12,407,222 2,987,492

219

2002

100.0

5,420,937 4,642,902 342,286 435,749

100.0 59.1 40.9

21,209,882 12,538,604 3,250,341

2003

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89.2 6.1 4.6

89.3 5.9 4.8 1,449 1,511 1,352 863

Average monthly payment for beneficiaries: Average for all beneficiaries (in dollars) For former active members, retired service For former active members retired disibility For survivors of former active members

The Council of State Governments

Source: U. S. Department of Commerce, U. S. Census Bureau, December 2004. Note: Detail may not add to totals due to rounding.

1,374 1,426 1,356 811

100.0

100.0

Percent distribution: Percent former active members, retired service Percent former active members, retired disibility Percent survivors of former active members

Recurrent benefit payments for last month of fiscal year: Total amount of benefit for retired/ survivors 7,852,487,401 7,116,489,779 Amount former active members, retired service 7,013,919,983 6,351,351,225 Amount former active members, retired disibility 462,604,657 435,866,540 Amount survivors of former active members 375,962,761 329,272,014

Percent distribution: Percent former active members, retired service Percent former active members, retired disibility Percent survivors of former active members

Beneficiaries receiving periodic benefits: Total number retired or survivors Former active members, retired service Former active members, retired disibility Survivors of former active members

Percent distribution: Active members Other

Membership last month of fiscal year: Total Membership Active members Inactive members

Number of systems

State 220 213

1,323 1,368 1,295 855

5.5 5.1

89.4

100.0

359,326,850 334,661,093

1,199 1,248 1,166 755

5.5 5.6

88.8

100.0

316,997,005 323,203,184

1,135 1,180 1,063 731

5.5 5.5

89.0

100.0

280,965,382 281,610,291

1,049 1,097 1,011 576

5.6 4.6

89.9

100.0

257,442,309 213,173,420

4,568,694,980 4,167,810,596

5.8 8.4

85.9

100.0

4,423,600 3,798,600 254,718 370,282

100.0 60.4 39.6

18,792,096 11,358,499 3,009,997

214

1998

5,857,036,896 5,099,631,979

5.8 8.5

85.6

100.0

4,522,178 3,872,834 264,360 384,984

100.0 62.3 37.7

18,857,782 11,757,108 2,578,496

1999

5,131,270,653 4,638,426,325

5.7 8.9

85.4

100.0

4,786,433 4,086,451 271,902 428,080

100.0 61.8 38.2

19,863,442 12,281,004 2,796,005

219

2000

6,551,024,839 5,739,832,168

5.6 7.9

86.5

100.0

4,951,157 4,282,245 277,493 391,419

100.0 61.4 38.6

19,946,136 12,244,404 2,750,575

2001

Table C NUMBER, MEMBERSHIP AND MONTHLY BENEFIT PAYMENTS OF STATE-ADMINISTERED EMPLOYER RETIREMENT SYSTEMS: 1993–2003

214

1,006 1,052 915 582

5.2 4.8

90.1

100.0

220,712,545 203,799,009

3,853,280,996

4,277,792,550

5.7 8.2

86.1

100.0

4,253,036 3,661,670 241,303 350,063

100.0 63.1 36.9

17,755,195 11,210,405 2,291,754

1997

994 1,042 927 533

5.0 4.4

90.6

100.0

209,156,037 181,729,192

3,751,445,046

4,142,330,275

5.4 8.2

86.4

100.0

4,166,221 3,599,888 225,521 340,812

100.0 64.2 35.8

17,335,904 11,121,324 2,048,359

203

1996 200

940 980 878 550

5.1 4.7

90.2

100.0

193,334,198 176,555,005

3,412,094,819

3,781,984,022

5.5 8.0

86.5

100.0

4,024,628 3,483,053 220,309 321,266

100.0 64.1 35.9

17,107,747 10,967,868 2,115,251

1995 192

832 858 801 523

5.2 4.4

90.4

100.0

171,342,146 147,184,296

2,990,611,108

3,309,137,550

5.4 7.1

87.6

100.0

3,979,371 3,484,001 213,802 281,568

100.0 65.8 34.2

16,034,883 10,545,461 1,510,051

1994

190

795 815 862 514

5.7 4.8

89.4

100.0

161,872,085 136,030,332

2,525,531,815

2,823,434,232

5.3 7.4

87.3

100.0

3,551,765 3,099,491 187,795 264,479

100.0 67.2 32.8

15,206,551 10,224,417 1,430,369

1993

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1,388,578,943 258,944,790 665,569,706 21,490,162 225,134,367 217,439,918

Nongovernmental Corporate bonds Corporate stocks Mortgages Foreign and international securities Other nongovernmental securities

See footnotes at end of table

152,579,686 32,711,410 119,868,276

1,570,340,383 181,761,440 181,312,675 139,453,009 41,859,666 448,765

Securities Governmental Federal Government United States Treasury Federal agency State and local government

Other investments Real property Miscellaneous investments

1,802,682,364 79,762,295

Amount of cash and investment holdings at end of the fiscal year Cash and desposits

109,087,129 98,835,637 4,220,641 6,030,851

Payments Benefits Withdrawals Administration

2002–2003 $129,993,356 24,780,564 36,996,114 19,190,046 17,806,068 68,216,678

Receipts Employee contributions Government contributions From state governments From local governments Earnings on investments

Item

152,695,621 34,818,209 117,877,412

1,350,207,877 290,050,962 653,982,383 20,052,800 216,166,650 169,955,082

1,531,401,377 181,193,500 180,721,339 124,273,164 56,448,175 472,161

1,774,662,873 90,565,875

98,225,642 88,713,825 3,257,640 6,254,177

-$8,448,868 23,006,094 32,059,268 16,795,329 15,263,939 -63,514,230

2001–2002

150,237,870 35,566,610 114,671,260

1,342,921,833 313,157,127 619,459,993 21,796,616 230,458,313 158,049,784

1,540,661,766 197,739,933 197,015,832 137,331,033 59,684,799 724,101

1,784,734,059 93,834,423

90,181,285 80,990,697 3,465,317 5,725,271

$95,532,600 21,892,512 32,608,891 17,124,394 15,484,497 41,031,197

2000–2001

154,861,129 42,222,968 112,638,161

1,323,540,864 278,566,269 636,606,069 20,454,176 246,904,776 141,009,574

1,544,764,421 221,223,557 220,863,102 161,312,021 59,551,081 360,455

1,797,953,426 98,327,876

79,457,536 72,216,032 3,754,613 3,486,891

$247,352,850 20,665,828 33,853,730 17,180,666 16,673,064 192,833,292

1999–2000

106,589,047 31,008,159 75,580,888

1,169,316,830 239,054,115 577,726,637 18,837,843 195,411,813 138,286,422

1,393,773,838 224,457,008 223,883,387 165,903,963 57,979,424 573,621

1,581,779,624 81,416,739

70,741,261 64,230,736 3,118,299 3,392,226

$219,670,158 19,786,741 33,467,754 16,878,613 16,589,141 166,415,663

1998–1999 1996–1997

58,957,458 53,743,045 2,840,955 2,373,458

88,248,257 29,347,473 58,900,784

1,037,212,688 211,349,020 518,863,787 20,752,082 167,440,243 118,807,556

73,852,297 28,538,000 45,314,297

869,564,968 185,259,386 424,794,006 12,160,708 130,681,334 116,669,534

1,265,801,454 1,089,349,314 228,588,766 219,784,346 228,319,703 219,584,946 169,033,658 164,944,185 59,286,045 54,640,761 269,063 199,400

1,426,403,895 1,220,527,088 72,354,184 57,325,477

65,481,683 59,658,756 3,222,767 2,600,160

$212,136,999 $188,018,445 18,334,766 17,435,994 34,620,047 36,893,266 17,619,625 20,170,257 17,000,422 16,723,009 159,182,186 133,689,185

1997–1998

Table D NATIONAL SUMMARY OF FINANCES OF STATE-ADMINISTERED EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT SYSTEMS: 1993–2003 (in thousands) 1995–1996 1994–1995 1993–1994

1992–1993

68,099,358 26,783,244 41,316,114

710,857,797 175,830,923 350,140,658 23,576,186 0 161,310,030

927,183,387 216,325,590 215,929,452 167,050,802 48,878,650 396,138

1,044,650,139 49,367,394

55,299,915 50,507,371 2,644,613 2,147,931

55,052,154 24,510,964 30,541,190

603,669,257 164,324,545 300,547,610 16,665,236 0 122,131,866

804,714,178 201,044,921 200,514,330 160,717,959 39,796,372 530,591

913,929,489 54,163,156

49,523,895 45,759,560 2,191,399 1,572,936

48,085,401 22,254,420 25,830,981

534,388,029 159,362,455 269,219,186 16,863,344 0 88,943,044

722,382,594 187,994,565 187,665,856 158,533,221 29,132,635 328,709

811,742,778 41,274,783

45,320,754 41,249,020 2,573,775 1,497,959

60,262,351 21,332,066 38,930,285

452,445,405 140,033,039 234,935,259 18,500,499 0 58,976,608

621,901,004 169,455,599 169,362,067 137,916,240 31,445,827 93,532

741,741,645 48,855,709

40,402,413 37,115,679 2,080,625 1,206,109

$156,317,595 $123,296,177 $110,071,915 $103,101,915 16,406,926 15,721,701 14,738,018 13,431,836 32,984,590 31,606,859 29,114,635 27,491,787 16,894,307 16,228,399 15,519,680 14,819,274 16,090,283 15,378,460 13,594,955 12,672,513 106,926,079 75,967,617 66,219,262 62,178,292

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8.5 1.8 6.6

Source: U. S. Department of Commerce, U. S. Census Bureau, December 2004. Note: Detail may not add to totals due to rounding.

Other investments Real property Miscellaneous investments

77.0 14.4 36.9 1.2 12.5 12.1

Nongovernmental Corporate bonds Corporate stocks Mortgages Foreign and international securities Other nongovernmental securities

5.1

4.4 87.1 10.1 10.1 7.7 2.3 0.0

Cash and desposits

Securities Governmental Federal Government United States Treasury Federal agency State and local government

100.0

100.0

Amount of cash and investment holdings at end of the fiscal year

8.6 2.0 6.6

76.1 16.3 36.9 1.1 12.2 9.6

86.3 10.2 10.2 7.0 3.2 0.0

100.0 90.3 3.3 6.4

100.0 90.6 3.9 5.5

Payments Benefits Withdrawals Administration

100.0% -272.3 -379.5 -198.8 -180.7 751.7

2001–2002

100.0% 19.1 28.5 14.8 13.7 52.5

2002–2003

Receipts Employee contributions Government contributions From state governments From local governments Earnings on investments

Item

8.4 2.0 6.4

75.2 17.5 34.7 1.2 12.9 8.9

86.3 11.1 11.0 7.7 3.3 0.0

5.3

100.0

100.0 89.8 3.8 6.3

100.0% 22.9 34.1 17.9 16.2 42.9

2000–2001

8.6 2.3 6.3

73.6 15.5 35.4 1.1 13.7 7.8

85.9 12.3 12.3 9.0 3.3 0.0

5.5

100.0

100.0 90.9 4.7 4.4

100.0% 8.4 13.7 6.9 6.7 78.0

1999–2000

6.7 2.0 4.8

73.9 15.1 36.5 1.2 12.4 8.7

88.1 14.2 14.2 10.5 3.7 0.0

5.1

100.0

100.0 90.8 4.4 4.8

100.0% 9.0 15.2 7.7 7.6 75.8

1998–1999

6.2 2.1 4.1

72.7 14.8 36.4 1.5 11.7 8.3

88.7 16.0 16.0 11.9 4.2 0.0

5.1

100.0

100.0 91.1 4.9 4.0

100.0% 8.6 16.3 8.3 8.0 75.0

1997–1998

6.1 2.3 3.7

71.2 15.2 34.8 1.0 10.7 9.6

89.3 18.0 18.0 13.5 4.5 0.0

4.7

100.0

100.0 91.2 4.8 4.0

100.0% 9.3 19.6 10.7 8.9 71.1

1996–1997

Table D NATIONAL SUMMARY OF FINANCES OF STATE-ADMINISTERED EMPLOYEE RETIREMENT SYSTEMS: 1993–2003 — CONTINUED (in thousands)

6.5 2.6 4.0

68.0 16.8 33.5 2.3 0.0 15.4

88.8 20.7 20.7 16.0 4.7 0.0

4.7

100.0

100.0 91.3 4.8 3.9

100.0% 10.5 21.1 10.8 10.3 68.4

1995–1996

6.0 2.7 3.3

66.1 18.0 32.9 1.8 0.0 13.4

88.0 22.0 21.9 17.6 4.4 0.1

5.9

100.0

100.0 92.4 4.4 3.2

100.0% 12.8 25.6 13.2 12.5 61.6

1994–1995

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Trends in Public Retirement Systems: Stresses in the System By Sujit M. CanagaRetna Severe weaknesses in the financial health of the nation’s public retirement systems rank as yet another force currently buffeting state and local government finances. Further compounding the problems faced by these public retirement funds are the following developments: the precarious financial position of private sector pensions and the federal Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation; the looming shortfalls expected in the Social Security and Medicare programs in coming decades; and the low personal savings rates of most Americans, coupled with the high rates of consumer and household debt. Given that the baby boomer generation is rapidly nearing retirement age and that America’s senior population is growing faster than the number of younger workers needed to cover their retirement needs, policy-makers across the country are paying a great deal of attention to this unfortunate confluence of events.

For some years now, a variety of interest groups and concerned citizens have emphasized that policymakers need to initiate concrete steps to prepare for the “graying” of America and the huge increase in the number of retirees. In fact, the number of people in the United States aged 65 and over is expected to nearly double by 2030; specifically, that age group is forecast to grow from about 13 percent of the total population in 2000, to 20 percent in 2030, and to remain above 20 percent for at least several decades thereafter.1 In this context, there is growing concern that more attention needs to be directed toward retirement planning and developing a retirement infrastructure that has the capacity to absorb the retirement needs of all Americans. Financial planners often recommend the threelegged stool concept in planning for retirement. Each leg of the stool represents a source of income in retirement, and the goal is to cumulatively attain a standard of living comparable to, if not slightly below, the one experienced prior to retirement. In this analysis, if the first leg of the stool is Social Security income, the other two legs of the stool refer to personal savings and retirement or pension system income. Alas, a close review of national financial and demographic trends reveals that all three legs of this metaphorical retirement stool remain rickety, a development that could seriously endanger the retirement plans of a majority of Americans. Social Security payments remain critical for most retirees; these payouts make up about 40 percent of the total income of people 65 and over. In addition, about two-thirds of those people receive at least half of their income from Social Security, and one-third receives at least 90 percent.2 In fact, in 2008, a scant 434

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four years away, the first cohort of baby boomers will reach 62 and be eligible to claim Social Security benefits; a few years later in 2011, they will be eligible to claim Medicare benefits. However, the Social Security Trust Fund will start paying out more than it takes in by 2018 and be depleted by 2044, based on current projections, while Medicare will start running deficits in 2013 and run out of money in 2026 requiring remedial action from policy-makers.3 Unfortunately, alongside the tenuous long-term financial viability of Social Security, there are serious problems associated with the other two legs of the symbolic retirement stool. It is becoming increasingly clear that relying on personal savings to bolster retirement income is not a realistic option for most Americans. According to the federal government, during the past few decades, savings as a proportion of disposable income has declined steadily. Specifically, the nation’s personal savings rate has plummeted from 11.2 percent of disposable income in 1982 (the highest level in the past three decades) to 1.7 percent in 2001, a precipitous decline indeed, before rising marginally to 2 percent in 2003.4 Further compounding this rapidly shrinking personal savings rate is the mountain of debt accumulated by most American households in recent years. Since 1999, household debt has leapt from 70 percent, to nearly 83 percent of the current gross domestic product.5 Moreover, consumers racked up $1.1 trillion in new mortgage and consumer debt between the end of 2001 and the third quarter of 2003, bringing the total of consumer and mortgage loans held by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) insured institutions to $2.6 trillion.6

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RETIREMENT Finally, the remaining leg of the figurative retirement stool, income flows from both public and private pension plans, is also wobbly. The asset base of both private and public sector pension plans experienced substantial erosion as a result of the bleak economic tide that enveloped the country in the initial years of this decade. For 10 years, between March 1991 and March 2001, the American economy experienced an unprecedented growth spurt and the positive flows of this expansion reflected very well on the asset base of both private and public sector retirement plans. However, in mid-2001, the U.S. economy began lurching to a stop, and the tragic events of September 11, 2001, pushed the already teetering economy into recession. Despite technically emerging from this recession after two quarters, the lingering effects of the economy continued for several years later with job creation, in particular, being very tepid. Compounding these economic trends were a number of additional problems that resulted in the equity markets taking a walloping for almost a threeyear period, 2000 through 2002. The Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation (PBGC), the federal organization that protects the pensions of 44.3 million American workers, indicated earlier this year that it was running a deficit of $11.2 billion and warned about its ability to protect private pensions in the future.7 Deficit forecasts for 2004 continue to be alarming with an increasing number of corporations seeking to be “trusteed” by the PBGC. Major corporations ranging from Bethlehem Steel to United Airlines to a host of others indicated their inability to meet their pension obligations to their retired employees and sought the protection of the PBGC in meeting these retirement expenditures. At the public pension level, the scenario remains bleak too. These economic and stock market developments, alongside crushing unfunded liability growth, according to the National Association of State Retirement Administrators, resulted in the actuarial funding levels of public retirement plans plunging to lower levels in fiscal year 2002, compared to fiscal year 2001.8 Specifically, between the fiscal years 2001 and 2002, the actuarial value of public retirement systems’ assets increased by 3 percent, or $57 billion; in contrast, liabilities grew by $154 billion, or 8.1 percent. Also, studies released by Wilshire Associates in March 2003 and 2004 confirmed this trend, indicating that the funding ratio (the ratio of pension assets-to-liabilities) for all state pension plans combined declined from 106 percent in 2001, to 91 percent in 2002, to 82 percent in 2003; the median (50th percentile) state pension plan had

a funding ratio of 79 percent in the March 2004 survey.9 In the last few years, these public retirement funds have attracted a great deal of attention, sometimes because of their shrinking asset base and sometimes for a variety of other reasons.10 From an 1857 retirement plan established in New York City to assist policemen injured in the line of duty, according to the latest federal data (June 30, 2002), the number of state and local government pension plans across the nation proliferated to 2,670, serving every stratum of state and local government. The importance of payments to beneficiaries from these state and local government retirement systems is a given, and the onus is on policy-makers to ensure the solvency and financial health of these plans. Notwithstanding the $2.2 trillion in cash and investment holdings in these retirement systems at the end of fiscal year 2002, more than 17.3 million total members and payments to over 6.2 million beneficiaries during this period, there is considerable interest in ensuring that this component of the U.S. retirement system remains on firm financial ground and continues to flourish in coming years.11 The stresses faced by state and local government retirement systems in the aftermath of what has been described as the worst fiscal crisis to sweep over states in more than six decades, and the continued sluggish performance of the economy, is illustrated by reviewing federal data over the most recent 10year period. Specifically, total receipts plunged precipitously by 102 percent between June 1998 and June 2002 ($263.4 billion to–$6.1 billion), while they grew by 109 percent between June 1993 and June 1998 ($125.9 billion to $263.4 billion). Conversely, total payments by state and local government retirement systems more than doubled between June 1993 and June 2002 ($52.6 billion to $122 billion). In addition to the information gleaned from the federal government, information obtained by means of a survey forwarded to 190 state and local government retirement plans in the 50 states and the District of Columbia remains useful here too. Of these 190 plans, 105 plans provided information for at least three of the five questions posed to them. Based on the survey responses, 36 of the 105 plans specifically had an asset base greater than $10 billion but less than $100 billion; two additional plans had an asset base greater than $100 billion. In terms of the number of annuitants (members or their family members receiving benefits) as a percentage of actives (members continuing to work and contribute), the survey indicated that a majority of the plans (70 The Council of State Governments

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RETIREMENT plans) fell between 20 percent and 69.9 percent. The survey also revealed that in terms of actuarial funding ratios, i.e., the actuarial value of a pension plan’s assets divided by its actuarial liabilities, only 25 of the 93 plans that provided information (of the 105 plans, 12 plans did not provide either the value of their actuarial assets or liabilities or both) were fully funded, with the remaining 68 plans underfunded to varying degrees. State legislatures play a critical role in the administration of these retirement plans given the fact that they are responsible for some of the appointments to the boards of trustees, most often the administrative entity charged with the responsibility of managing and planning investments and benefit payouts. Hence, these trustees play a pivotal role in ensuring the continued growth of the retirement system funds taking into consideration a number of factors, such as the active-to-inactive member ratio, active participants to number of retirees receiving payments ratio, the overall investment climate (national and international) and ways to tweak an investment portfolio to diminish negative economic trends. One example where a legislature immersed itself in the activities of a state retirement system involves Maryland. After learning about their state pension fund’s abysmal record, Maryland legislators and other state policymakers began a series of investigations and explorations into determining the reasons for this poor performance. In response to these queries and concerns, comprehensive reforms were introduced, both statutorily and organizationally, including a number of senior officials being relieved of their duties. In addition, federal authorities indicated that they had initiated a criminal investigation of a number of former employees, an investigation that eventually resulted in indictments, trials and convictions for several employees for fraud. A number of other legislatures also delved into the affairs of their public retirement systems either to buttress their finances through a bond issue (California, Illinois, Kansas) or to initiate reforms to enhance their efficiency and effectiveness (Louisiana).

Policy Options and Considerations Ensuring both the short-term and long-term financial viability of the different elements in America’s retirement systems, both private and public, remains of paramount importance. It is a challenge and responsibility that extends to policy-makers at every level of government—federal, state and local—and every American. In fact, first resuscitating and then sustaining the financial health of our different retire436

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ment income flows provides the underpinnings for the foundation of the United States as an economic, political and military powerhouse in the global context. Consequently, it is imperative that policy-makers and citizens alike initiate efforts now to bolster the shaky pillars of America’s current retirement system so that the costs of making these fundamental reforms in the future are minimized. In reviewing and analyzing related data, it is quickly apparent that all three legs of the proverbial retirement stool are wobbly and require urgent attention. Research shows weaknesses in the Social Security and Medicare systems and the PBGC; the low savings rate in contemporary American society coupled with the crushing level of consumer debt; and, finally, the severe losses suffered by a majority of the public sector retirement plans in recent years due to the souring economy, the collapse of the equities markets and occasional lax oversight by plan administrators. The grim news percolating from these different retirement sources in recent years accentuates the importance for both citizens and policy-makers to be energized about initiating remedial action. The fact that in a short four years the first wave of baby boomers will begin retiring in sizable numbers, precipitating tremendous fiscal strains on these different retirement sources, further reinforces the urgency for these reforms. In formulating comprehensive policy responses to this nascent crisis, it is important to consider the following issues. • In order to overcome the severe disadvantages associated with an abysmally low savings rate, is it time for policy-makers—at all levels of government—to begin an assortment of educational and incentive programs to first, instill the importance of savings, and then increase savings rates? These programs could be introduced into the curriculum of schools throughout the country, possibly as early as the elementary level, building up in complexity as children proceed through the school system. At the other end, even greater incentives for individuals to save for retirement could also potentially be offered by the different levels of government. A quick comparison of household savings ratios among the world’s three largest economic regions reinforces the fact that the United States lags significantly in this area, a statistic that should spur remedial action at every level of our society. According to a report released in June 2004, the household saving ratio in 2002 in the Euro area loomed at about 15 percent, ahead

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RETIREMENT of the approximately 6.5 percent in Japan and significantly ahead of the United States’ ratio of about 2 percent. 12 The United States has to improve its performance in this critical area and the sooner policy-makers initiate programs to do so, the better. • In order to avoid a financial catastrophe related to Social Security, Medicare and the PBGC in the near future, is it time for policy-makers, primarily at the federal level, to engage the public in a substantive debate about fundamental reforms? The sooner this discussion is initiated the better because the potential for these federal programs to quickly convert from ticking time bombs to explosive issues looms large. While there has been some peripheral discussion about reforming the Social Security and Medicare systems, the PBGC’s plight has largely been out of the public arena. The PBGC, which is mandated to protect the pensions of bankrupt and flailing corporations, remains severely underfunded and an ever increasing number of corporations, from small, relatively unknown ones to the more famous, established ones, have sought the protection of this federal agency. Bethlehem Steel, Consolidated Freightways, Acme Steel and the National Steel Pellet Company are a mere fraction of the companies covering more than 500,000 Americans that have failed in the past three years and been taken over by the federal government. The level of pension underfunding in the airline industry alone is estimated to be about $31 billion on a termination basis at the end of 2003, a staggering amount for just a single industry. Cumulatively, the level of pension underfunding for the companies seeking the protection of the federal government could be gargantuan, possibly eclipsing the magnitude of the federal government’s bail out of the savings and loan industry in the 1980s. At a time when the fiscal demands being leveled at the federal government are increasing exponentially, and at a time when the federal government’s budget situation is awash in a sea of red ink, the potential for these ticking fiscal time bombs (Social Security, Medicare and the PBGC) to explode remains a most alarming possibility. • Finally, is it time for state policy-makers and citizens to closely and continuously monitor the performance of state and local government retirement funds so as to avoid the financial pitfalls faced by some entities with the introduction of features such as Deferred Retirement Option Plans, the

mismanagement of fund assets, the investment choices made by fund managers, the practice of deferring contributions to retirement funds during a time of budget shortfalls among other issues? Another important development related to these public sector retirement funds in these fiscally trying times involves the administrative entities of these plans whittling away at the benefits they offer to lower their expenditures. Will this emerging trend affect the ability of state and local governments to attract top-flight candidates to staff public sector positions? The case could be made that the ability of the public sector to attract high-caliber employees pivoted around the benefits offered in the public sector from the defined benefit retirement plan to healthcare coverage, both before and during retirement. These policy considerations related to America’s retirement systems remain of great importance as policy-makers and citizens deal with the onset of an aging population and a series of other, complex policy issues that will confront the nation in the next few decades. The sooner we begin the discussion about strengthening the shaky legs of our figurative retirement stool, the better. Note: In October 2004, the Southern Legislative Conference (SLC), the southern office of The Council of State Governments, issued a 50-state Special Series Report entitled “America’s Public Retirement Plans: Stresses in the System.” This article is based on information and analysis carried out for this report.

Notes 1 The Congress of the United States, Congressional Budget Office (CBO), Baby Boomers’ Retirement Prospects: An Overview, November 2003. 2 Ibid., 4. 3 “Medicare and Social Security Challenges,” The New York Times, March 2, 2004. 4 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, Personal Income and its Disposition, March 1, 2004. 5 “Debt-Heavy Economy May Be Too Jittery About Rates,” The New York Times, January 31, 2004. 6 “Consumer Debt: How Much Is Too Much,” EconSouth, Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta, First Quarter 2004. 7 “Pension Agency Deficit Mounts,” The Baltimore Sun, January 16, 2004. 8 National Association of State Retirement Administrators, Public Fund Survey: Summary of Findings, August 2003. 9 Wilshire Associates, Inc., 2003 Wilshire Report on State Retirement Systems: Funding Levels and Asset Allocation,

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RETIREMENT March 12, 2003 and 2004 Wilshire Report on State Retirement Systems: Funding Levels and Asset Allocation, March 12, 2004. 10 There has been a spate of articles in media outlets across the country probing the financial status of the nation’s public retirement system. This reporting has been particularly pronounced in the aftermath of the 2000–2002 stock market declines when the shriveling asset base of these retirement funds prompted all sorts of inquiries and analysis by a range of different investigative bodies and interested parties. 11 U.S. Department of Commerce, State and Local Government Employee Retirement Systems, www.census.gov/ govs/www/retire.html. 12 “Comparison of Household Savings Ratios: Euro Area, Japan and United States,” Statistics Brief, (Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, June 8, 2004), No. 8.

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About the Author Sujit M. CanagaRetna is currently the senior fiscal analyst at The Council of State Governments’ Southern Office, the Southern Legislative Conference (SLC), where he has been since March 1998. He is responsible for tracking fiscal, economic development and transportation trends for CSG and SLC. CanagaRetna has a bachelor’s degree (BA) from Bennington College, Vermont and graduate degrees in International Affairs and Public Administration (MIA/MPA) from Columbia University. Prior to joining CSG/SLC, CanagaRetna worked for the New York City Comptroller’s Office.

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State Universities’ Retirement System Teachers’ Retirement System Teachers’ Retirement System Law Enforcement Officers’ and Firefighters’ Retirement System—Plan 2 (a) State Employees’ Retirement System Teachers’ Retirement System Maine State Retirement System Massachusetts Teachers’ Retirement System Iowa Public Employees’ Retirement System Firefighters’ Retirement System of Louisiana Public Employees’ Retirement Board Public Employees’ Retirement System Indiana State Teachers’ Retirement Fund Judicial Retirement System New Hampshire Retirement System Public Employees’ Retirement System State Teachers’ Retirement System Public Employees’ Retirement Association Public Employees’ Retirement System Teachers’ Retirement Board Public Employees’ Retirement System of Mississippi State Highway Patrol Retirement System Iowa Dept of Public Safety Peace Officers’ Retirement, Accident, and Disability System Public School Retirement System Public Employees’ Retirement Association Public Employees’ Retirement System Public Employees’ Retirement System—Plans 2 & 3 (a) Public School Non-Teacher Employee Retirement System Kentucky Retirement Systems Municipal Retirement System Police and Fire Pension Fund (c) South Carolina Retirement Systems (d) Massachusetts State Retirement System School Employees’ Retirement System—Plans 2 & 3 (a) Police Pension and Retirement System

Illinois ................................. Oklahoma .......................... Alaska ................................. Washington ........................ Louisiana ...........................

Louisiana ........................... Maine .................................. Massachusetts ................... Iowa .................................... Louisiana ...........................

Alaska ................................. West Virginia ..................... Indiana ............................... Iowa .................................... New Hampshire .................

Kansas ................................ Ohio .................................... Colorado ............................ Oklahoma .......................... Connecticut ........................

Mississippi ......................... Ohio .................................... Iowa .................................... Missouri ............................. Minnesota ..........................

Nevada ................................ Washington ........................ Missouri ............................. Kentucky ............................ Texas ...................................

Ohio .................................... South Carolina .................. Massachusetts ................... Washington ........................ Oklahoma ..........................

See footnotes at end of table.

Judicial Retirement System (a) Teachers’ Retirement System (Defined Benefit) General Assembly Retirement System Judges’ Retirement System Teachers’ Retirement System of Illinois (b)

Plan name

Washington ........................ West Virginia ..................... Illinois ................................. Illinois ................................. Illinois .................................

State or other jurisdiction

Table A ACTUARIAL FUNDING RATIO

$

8,682,703,560 22,860,101,000 15,930,753,000 1,519,000,000 1,392,043,000

15,900,000,000 10,701,000,000 1,677,800,000 15,500,000,000 10,815,090,275

16,980,000 527,604,456 246,443,600 20,048,000,000 11,195,902,000

10,853,000,000 51,696,919,000 30,600,000,000 5,354,795,771 11,961,346,260

7,687,281 2,699,941,000 6,100,000,000 70,017,875 3,500,000,000

11,828,900,000 5,900,000,000 17,074,650,000 15,403,200,907 658,376,086

9,714,500 6,436,852,137 3,752,285 2,646,000,000 6,487,538,000

8,000,000 1,190,882,000 49,676,302 330,053,560 23,124,823,000

Value Date

Jan. 2003 June 2003 Dec. 2003 Sept. 2002 July 2003

June 2003 Sept. 2002 June 2003 June 2003 Dec. 2003

June 2003 Dec. 2002 June 2003 June 2003 July 2003

Dec. 2003 June 2003 Dec. 2003 July 2003 June 2002

June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 June 2003

June 2003 June 2002 Dec. 2003 June 2003 June 2003

June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 Sept. 2002 June 2003

Sept 2002 June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 June 2003

Actuarial assets

10,508,366,996 27,377,055,000 18,996,053,000 1,804,000,000 1,646,979,675

19,500,000,000 13,093,000,000 2,049,700,000 18,890,000,000 13,100,126,794

21,486,000 663,069,805 306,098,170 24,719,400,000 13,776,198,000

14,440,000,000 68,734,061,000 40,500,000,000 6,974,583,356 15,253,882,989

10,561,563 3,691,001,000 8,200,000,000 93,561,000 4,669,000,000

17,173,300,000 8,500,000,000 24,519,059,000 22,108,936,178 944,688,430

18,025,000 11,925,161,689 5,835,609 4,042,000,000 9,796,306,000

95,000,000 6,243,834,000 196,510,067 1,076,231,965 46,933,432,000

$

Value

Jan.. 2003 June 2003 Dec. 2003 Sept. 2002 July 2003

June 2003 Sept. 2002 June 2003 June 2003 Dec. 2003

June 2003 Dec. 2002 June 2003 June 2003 July 2003

Dec. 2003 June 2003 Dec. 2003 July 2003 June 2002

June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 June 2003

June 2003 June 2002 Dec. 2003 June 2003 June 2003

June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 Sept. 2002 June 2003

Sept. 2002 June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 June 2003

Date

Actuarial liabilities

82.6 83.5 83.9 84.2 84.5

81.5 81.7 81.9 82.1 82.6

79.0 79.6 80.5 81.1 81.3

75.2 75.2 75.6 76.8 78.4

72.8 73.1 74.4 74.8 75.0

68.9 69.4 69.6 69.7 69.7

53.9 54.0 64.3 65.5 66.2

8.4% 19.1 25.3 30.7 49.3

Actuarial funding ratio percent

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County and District Retirement System Arkansas Local Police and Fire Retirement System State Employees’ Retirement System Nebraska Public Employees’ Retirement Systems Wyoming Retirement System (e) Teachers’ Retirement System—Plan 1 (a) Teachers’ Pension and Annuity Fund State Retirement Systems Teachers’ Retirement Systems of Alabama State Retirement and Pension System Teachers’ Retirement System California Public Employees’ Retirement System (f) Employees’ Retirement System of Alabama Public Employee Retirement Association (g) Missouri Local Government Employees Retirement System South Dakota Retirement System Public School Employees’ Retirement System Public Employees’ Retirement Association Illinois Municipal Retirement Fund Employees’ Retirement System of Texas Public Employees’ Retirement System Wisconsin Retirement System Consolidated Retirement System—State, Teachers & Higher Education Employees Arizona State Retirement System Public Safety Personnel Retirement System District of Columbia Teachers’ Retirement Fund Police Officers’ and Fire Fighters’ Retirement Board State of Delaware Employees’ Deferred Compensation Plan Teachers’ Retirement System Consolidated Retirement System—Political Subdivision Pension Plan Judges’ Retirement System (a) Washington State Patrol Retirement System (a) Employees’ Retirement System State Retirement System State Police Retirement System

Texas ................................... Arkansas ............................ Missouri ............................. Nebraska ............................ Wyoming ............................

Washington ........................ New Jersey ......................... Utah .................................... Alabama ............................. Maryland ...........................

Texas ................................... California ........................... Alabama ............................. Montana ............................. Missouri .............................

South Dakota ..................... Pennsylvania ..................... New Mexico ....................... Illinois ................................. Texas ...................................

New Jersey ......................... Wisconsin ........................... Tennessee ........................... Arizona ............................... Arizona ...............................

Dist. of Columbia .............. Dist. of Columbia .............. Delaware ............................ New York ............................ Tennessee ...........................

Washington ........................ Washington ........................ Georgia ............................... Virginia .............................. New Jersey .........................

See footnotes at end of table.

Teachers’ Fund for Retirement Public Employees’ Retirement System—Plan 1 (a) Teachers’ Retirement System—Plans 2 & 3 (a) Judicial Retirement System Public Employees’ Retirement System

Plan name

North Dakota .................... Washington ........................ Washington ........................ New Jersey ......................... Oregon ................................

State or other jurisdiction

ACTUARIAL FUNDING RATIO—Continued

5,000,000 689,000,000 12,124,414,000 38,957,000,000 1,865,100

917,800,000 1,427,800,000 209,343,469 74,400,000,000 3,606,000,000

27,400,000,000 62,685,300,000 22,099,000,000 24,303,639,447 8,600,000,000

4,685,890,770 52,900,000,000 8,971,080,804 17,529,890,818 19,478,554,993

89,033,023,666 156,067,000,000 8,100,000,000 3,679,960,000 2,604,000,000

9,366,000,000 34,600,000,000 14,700,000,000 18,100,000,000 32,631,465,000

9,788,900,000 553,000,000 6,057,329,072 5,259,423,944 4,657,898,000

1,438,400,000 10,757,000,000 3,800,000,000 372,800,000 35,537,100,000

Value Date

Sept. 2002 Sept. 2002 June 2002 June 2002 June 2003

Sept. 2003 Sept. 2003 April 2004 June 2002 July 2003

June 2003 Dec. 2003 July 2003 June 2003 June 2003

June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 Dec. 2003 Aug 2003

Aug 2003 June 2002 Sept. 2002 June 2002 June 2002

Sept. 2002 June 2003 Dec. 2003 June 2003 June 2003

Dec. 2003 Dec. 2003 June 2003 June 2003 Jan. 2004

July 2003 Sept. 2002 Sept. 2002 June 2003 Dec. 2002

Actuarial assets

5,000,000 686,000,000 11,994,850,000 38,265,000,000 1,815,700

917,800,000 1,427,800,000 209,343,469 74,400,000,000 3,606,000,000

28,000,000,000 63,211,700,000 22,152,000,000 24,303,639,447 8,600,000,000

4,818,943,695 54,400,000,000 9,215,945,484 17,966,103,485 19,959,111,546

94,263,027,542 163,961,000,000 8,400,000,000 3,815,811,000 2,700,000,000

10,209,000,000 37,300,000,000 15,800,000,000 19,400,000,000 34,974,601,000

10,813,500,000 610,000,000 6,662,291,406 5,760,891,499 5,077,443,000

1,690,300,000 12,532,000,000 4,422,000,000 431,500,000 39,520,500,000

Value

Sept. 2002 Sept. 2002 June 2002 June 2002 June 2003

Sept. 2003 Sept. 2003 Apr. 2004 June 2002 July 2003

June 2003 Dec. 2003 July 2003 June 2003 June 2003

June 2003 June 2003 June 2003 Dec. 2003 Aug 2003

Aug 2003 June 2002 Sept. 2002 June 2002 June 2002

Sept. 2002 June 2003 Dec. 2003 June 2003 June 2003

Dec. 2003 Dec. 2003 June 2003 June 2003 Jan. 2004

July 2003 Sept. 2002 Sept. 2002 June 2003 Dec. 2002

Date

Actuarial liabilities

100.0 100.4 101.1 101.8 102.7

100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 100.0

97.9 99.2 99.8 100.0 100.0

97.2 97.2 97.3 97.6 97.6

94.5 95.2 96.4 96.4 96.4

91.7 92.8 93.0 93.3 93.3

90.5 90.7 90.9 91.3 91.7

85.1 85.8 85.9 86.4 89.9

Actuarial funding ratio percent

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Legislative Retirement System Georgia Judicial Retirement System Public Employee Retirement System of Idaho

Georgia ............................... Georgia ............................... Idaho ................................... 26,637,000 228,417,000 6,498,685,238

666,588,289 101,900,000,000 727,529,000 129,425,907 5,095,000,000

18,400,000,000 17,384,179,000 27,465,000,000 124,000,000 55,183,599,877

Value Date

June 2002 June 2002 July 2003

Aug 2003 July 2002 June 2002 Aug 2003 Sept. 2002

June 2002 June 2003 Dec. 2003 Dec. 2002 Dec. 2002

Actuarial assets

21,779,000 175,154,000 534,638,594

597,914,188 89,300,000,000 630,295,000 111,115,600 4,338,000,000

17,900,000,000 16,856,379,000 26,179,000,000 118,000,000 51,877,037,007

Value

June 2002 June 2002 July 2003

Aug 2003 July 2002 June 2002 Aug 2003 Sept. 2002

June 2002 June 2003 Dec. 2003 Dec. 2002 Dec. 2002

Date

Actuarial liabilities

122.3 130.1 1215.5

111.5 114.1 115.4 116.5 117.5

102.8 103.1 104.9 105.1 106.4

Actuarial funding ratio percent

the Judges’ and Solicitors’ Retirement System. (e) Data for the Wyoming Retirement System includes the Public Employee Retirement System; Wyoming Game & Fish Employees’ Retirement System; Volunteer Firemen’s Pension Fund; Paid Firemen’s System (Plan A and Plan B); Wyoming Law Enforcement System; and the Wyoming Judicial Retirement Plan. (f) Data for CalPERS includes the California Public Employees’ Retirement System; the Legislators’ Retirement System; Judges’ Retirement System I; Judges’ Retirement System II; State Peace Officers’ and Firefighters’ Defined Contribution Program; and the Volunteer Firefighters’ Length of Service Award System. (g) Data for MPERA includes the Public Employees’ Retirement System; Judges’ Retirement System (JRS); Highway Patrol Officers’ Retirement System (HPORS); Sheriffs’ Retirement System (SRS); Game Wardens’ & Peace Officers’ Retirement System (GWPORS); and the Volunteer Firefighters’ Compensation Act (VFCA). (h) For the Volunteer Firefighters’ and Reserve Officers’ Relief and Pension Principal Fund, relief liabilities are not included; only pension liabilities. (i) Data for the North Carolina Retirement System includes the Teachers’ and State Employees’ Retirement System; Local Government Employees’ Retirement System; Consolidated Judicial Retirement System; and the Firemen and Rescue Squad Workers’ Pension Fund. (j) This is based on the market value as of March 25, 2004.

Law Enforcement & Custodial Officer Supplemental Retirement Fund Florida Retirement System (FRS) (j) Public School Employees’ Retirement System Judicial Retirement System—Plan II Law Enforcement Officers’ and Firefighters’ Retirement System—Plan 1 (a)

Texas ................................... Florida ................................ Georgia ............................... Texas ................................... Washington ........................

Source: The Council of State Governments’ Southern Office Survey (For additional detaials on the survey responses, please see, Sujit CanagaRetna, America’s Public Retirement Plans: Stresses in the System, Special Series Report, Southern Legislative Conference, October 2004, www.slcatlanta.org/Publications.htm.) Note: The survey was forwarded to 190 plans of which responses were received from 105 plans. Of these 105 plans, 12 plans did not provide information on their actuarial assets and/or actuarial liabilities. (See Table B, below, for these 12 plans). Hence, it was impossible to calculate an acuarial funding ratio for these 12 plans. This lowered the number of plans for which information is presented in Table A above from 105 plans to 93 plans. Key: (a) For this Washington state plan’s actuarial liability, the Present Value of Fully Projected Benefits (PVFPB) is presented. (b) Illinois issued $10 billion in pension obligation bonds in June 2003. TRS’ share of $4,330,374,000 was received after the close of the fiscal year and not included in asset figures. (c) The market value of this plan is unaudited. (d) Data for the SCRS includes South Carolina Retirement System (serving state employees, teachers and other government employees); Police Officers’ Retirement System; General Assembly Retirement System; and

Police and Fireman’s Retirement System Teachers’ Retirement Association State Employees’ Retirement System Volunteer Firefighters’ and Reserve Officers’ Relief and Pension Principal Fund (h) North Carolina Retirement Systems (i)

Plan name

New Jersey ......................... Minnesota .......................... Pennsylvania ..................... Washington ........................ North Carolina ..................

State or other jurisdiction

ACTUARIAL FUNDING RATIO—Continued

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Judicial Retirement System—Plan 1 Georgia Military Pension Fund

Texas ................................... Georgia ...............................

Source: The Council of State Governments’ Southern Office Survey (For additional detaials on the survey responses, please see, Sujit CanagaRetna, America’s Public Retirement Plans: Stresses in the System, Special Series Report, Southern Legislative Conference, October 2004, www.slcatlanta.org/Publications.htm.) Note: The survey was forwarded to 190 plans of which responses were received from 105 plans. Of these 105

Municipal Police Officers’ and Firefighters’ Retirement Trust Funds Office Teachers and State Employees Supplemental Retirement Plans State Deferred Compensation Plan 457 Deferred Compensation Plan Deferred Compensation Plan

Florida ................................ Maryland ........................... New Mexico ....................... Nevada ................................ Nevada ................................

Plan name Alaska State Pension Investment Board Colorado County Officials and Employees Retirement Association State of Colorado 457 Match Plan Plus District of Columbia 457 Deferred Compensation Plan (DCPlus) Deferred Compensation Plan

State or other jurisdiction

Alaska ................................. Colorado ............................ Colorado ............................ Dist. of Columbia .............. Florida ................................

Value Date

... June 2002

... ... ... Dec. 2003 ...

... ... March 2005 ... ...

Value

$19,959,111,546 $8,322,000

Unknown Not applicable Not provided $0 Not available

Not provided Not provided Not available Not available Not available

Actuarial liabilities Date

Aug. 2003 June 2002

Dec. 2003 ...

... ...

... ... ... ... ...

plans, 12 plans did not provide information on their actuarial assets and/or actuarial liabilities. (See Table B, below, for these 12 plans). Hence, it was impossible to calculate an acuarial funding ratio for these 12 plans. This lowered the number of plans for which information is presented in Table A above from 105 plans to 93 plans.

Not available Not applicable

Unknown Not applicable Not provided $0 Not available

Not provided Not provided $246,972,207 Not available Not available

Actuarial assets

Table B TWELVE PLANS THAT DID NOT PROVIDE EITHER ACTUARIAL ASSETS AND/OR ACTUARIAL LIABILITIES

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TAXES

Table 7.1 STATE TAX AMNESTY PROGRAMS 1982–2005 Accounts receivable included

Collections ($ millions) (a)

All

No

$3.2

No

No (c) Yes Yes

All Individual income All (t)

No No N.A.

6.0 N.A. 73.0

Yes No Yes

9/1/87–11/30/87

Yes

All

No

1.7

Yes

12/10/84–3/15/85

Individual income Sales Income, Franchise, Sales

Yes No N.A.

154.0 43.0 N.A.

Yes Yes Yes

State or other jurisdiction

Amnesty period

Legislative authorization

Alabama .....................

1/20/84–4/1/84

No (c)

Arizona .......................

11/22/82–1/20/83 1/1/0–2/28/02 9/1/03–10/31/03

Arkansas .................... California ...................

Major taxes covered

Installment arrangements permitted (b)

2/1/05–3/31/05

Yes Yes Yes

Colorado ....................

9/16/85–11/15/85 6/1/03–6/30/03

Yes N.A.

All All

No N.A.

6.4 18.4

Yes Yes

Connecticut ................

9/1/90–11/30/90 9/1/95–11/30/95 9/1/02-12/2/02

Yes Yes N.A.

All All All

Yes Yes N.A.

54.0 46.2 109

Yes Yes N.A.

Florida ........................

1/1/87–6/30/87 1/1/88–6/30/88 7/1/03–10/31/03

Yes Yes (d) Yes

Intangibles All All

No No N.A.

13.0 8.4 (d) 80

No No N.A.

Georgia .......................

10/1/92–12/5/92

Yes

All

Yes

51.3

No

Idaho ...........................

5/20/83–8/30/83

No (c)

Individual income

No

0.3

Illinois .........................

10/1/84–11/30/84 10/1/03–11/17/03

Yes Yes

All (u) All

Yes N.A.

160.5 532

Iowa ............................

9/2/86–10/31/86

Yes

All

Yes

35.1

N.A.

Kansas ........................

7/1/84–9/30/84 10/1/03–11/30/03

Yes Yes

All All

No Yes

0.6 53.7

No N.A.

Kentucky ....................

9/15/88–9/30/88 8/1/02–9/30/02

Yes (c) Yes (c)

All All

No No

100 100

No No

Louisiana ...................

10/1/85–12/31/85 10/1/87–12/15/87 10/1/98–12/31/98 9/1/01–10/30/01

Yes Yes Yes Yes

All All All All

No No No (q) Yes

1.2 0.3 1.3 173.1

Yes (f) Yes (f) No No

Maine ..........................

11/1/90–12/31/90 9/1/03–11/30/03

Yes Yes

All All

Yes N.A.

29.0 34.7

Yes N.A.

Maryland ...................

9/1/87–11/2/87 9/1/01–10/31/01

Yes Yes

All All

Yes Yes

34.6 (g) 39.2

No No

Massachusetts ...........

10/17/83–1/17/84 10/1/02–11/30/02 1/1/03–2/28/03

Yes Yes Yes

All All All

Yes Yes Yes

86.5 96.1 N.A.

Yes (h) Yes N.A.

Michigan ....................

5/12/86–6/30/86 5/15/02–6/30/02

Yes Yes

All All

Yes Yes

109.8 N.A.

No N.A.

Minnesota ..................

8/1/84–10/31/84

Yes

All

Yes

12.1

No

Mississippi .................

9/1/86–11/30/86 9/1/04–12/31/04

Yes Yes

All All

No No

1.0 7.9

No No

Missouri .....................

9/1/83–10/31/83 8/1/02–10/31/02 8/1/03–10/31/ 03

No (c) Yes Yes

All All All

No Yes Yes

0.9 76.4 20

Nebraska ....................

8/1/04–10/31/04

Yes

All

No

7.5

Nevada ........................

2/1/02–6/30/02

N.A.

All

N.A.

7.3

N.A.

New Hampshire .........

12/1/97–2/17/98 12/1/01–2/15/02

Yes Yes

All All

Yes Yes

13.5 13.5

No N.A.

New Jersey .................

9/10/87–12/8/87 3/15/96–6/1/96 4/15/02–6/10/02

Yes Yes Yes

All All All

Yes Yes Yes

186.5 359.0 276.9

Yes No N.A.

New Mexico ...............

8/15/85–11/13/85 8/16/99–11/12/99

Yes Yes

All (i) All

No Yes

13.6 45

Yes Yes

New York ....................

11/1/85–1/31/86 11/1/96–1/31/97 11/18/02–1/31/03

Yes Yes Yes

All (j) All All

Yes Yes Yes

401.3 253.4 582.7

North Carolina ..........

9/1/89–12/1/89

Yes

All (k)

Yes

37.6

No No N.A.

No N.A. N.A. No

Yes Yes (o) Yes (s) No

See footnotes at end of table.

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443


TAXES

STATE TAX AMNESTY PROGRAMS — Continued State or other jurisdiction

Amnesty period 9/1/83–11/30/83 10/1/03–1/31/04

No (c) Yes

All N.A.

No N.A.

Ohio ............................

10/15/01–1/15/02

Yes

All

No

48.5

Oklahoma ..................

7/1/84–12/31/84 8/15/02–11/15/02

Yes N.A.

Income, Sales All (r)

Yes Yes

13.9 N.A.

No (l) N.A.

Pennsylvania .............

10/13/95–1/10/96

Yes

All

Yes

N.A.

No

Rhode Island .............

10/15/86–1/12/87 4/15/96–6/28/96

Yes Yes

All All

No Yes

0.7 7.9

Yes Yes

South Carolina ..........

9/1/85–11/30/85 10/15/02–11/30/02

Yes Yes

All All

Yes Yes

7.1 66.2

Yes N.A.

South Dakota .............

4/1/99–5/15/99

Yes

All

Yes

0.5

Texas ...........................

2/1/84–2/29/84 3/11/04–3/31/04

No (c) No (c)

No (c) No (c)

No No

0.5 N.A.

Vermont .....................

5/15/90–6/25/90

Yes

All

Yes

Virginia ......................

2/1/90–3/31/90 9/2/03–11/3/03

Yes Yes

All All

Yes Yes

32.2 98.3

No N.A.

West Virginia .............

10/1/86–12/31/86 9/1/04–10/31/04

Yes Yes

All All

Yes N.A.

15.9 10.4

Yes Yes

Wisconsin ...................

9/15/85–11/22/85 6/15/98–8/14/98

Yes Yes

All All

Yes (n) Yes

27.3 30.9

Yes N.A.

Dist. of Columbia ......

7/1/87–9/30/87 7/10/95–8/31/95

Yes Yes

All All (p)

Yes Yes

24.3 19.5

Yes Yes

Major taxes covered

444

Collections ($ millions) (a)

Installment arrangements permitted (b)

North Dakota ............

Source: The Federation of Tax Administrators, January 2005. Key: N.A.—Not available. (a) Where applicable, figure indicates local portions of certain taxes collected under the state tax amnesty program. (b) No indicates requirement of full payment by the expiration of the amnesty period. Yes indicates allowance of full payment after the expiration of the amnesty period. (c) Authority for amnesty derived from pre-existing statutory powers permitting the waiver of tax penalties. (d) Does not include intangibles tax and drug taxes. Gross collections totaled $22.1 million, with $13.7 million in penalties withdrawn. (e) Preliminary figure. (f) Amnesty taxpayers were billed for the interest owed, with payment due within 30 days of notification. (g) Figure includes $1.1 million for the separate program conducted by the Department of Natural Resources for the boat excise tax. (h) The amnesty statute was construed to extend the amnesty to those who applied to the department before the end of the amnesty period, and permitted them to file overdue returns and pay back taxes and interest at a later date. (i) The severance taxes, including the six oil and gas severance taxes, the resources excise tax, the corporate franchise tax, and the special fuels tax were not subject to amnesty. (j) Availability of amnesty for the corporation tax, the oil company taxes,

7-1

Accounts receivable included

Legislative authorization

1.0 (e)

Yes N.A. No

N.A. No No No

the transporation and transmissions companies tax, the gross receipts oil tax and the unincorporated business tax restricted to entities with 500 or fewer employees in the United States on the date of application. In addition, a taxpayer principally engaged in aviation, or a utility subject to the supervision of the State Department of Public Service was also ineligible. (k) Local taxes and real property taxes were not included. (l) Full payment of tax liability required before the end of the amnesty period to avoid civil penalties. (m) Texas does not impose a corporate or individual income tax. In practical effect, the amnesty was limited to the sales tax and other excises. (n) Waiver terms varied depending upon the date the tax liability was assessed. (o) Installment arrangements were permitted if applicant demonstrated that payment would present a severe financial hardship. (p) Does not include real property taxes. All interest was waived on tax payments made before July 31, 1995. After this date, only 50% of the interest was waived. (q) Exception for individuals who owed $500 or less. (r) Except for property and motor fuel taxes. (s) Multiple payments can be made so long as the required balance is paid in full no later than March 15, 2003. (t) All taxes except property, estate and unclaimed property. (u) Does not include the motor fuel use tax.

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TAXES

Table 7.2 STATE EXCISE TAX RATES (As of January 1, 2005) State or other jurisdiction

General sales and gross receipts tax (percent)

Cigarettes (cents per pack of 20)

Distilled spirits ($ per gallon)

Motor fuel (cents per gallon) Gasoline

Diesel

Gasohol

(g) $12.80 (i) 3.00 2.50 (i) 3.30 (i)

18.0 (j) (v) 8.0 18.0 (l) 21.5 18.0 (q)

19.0 (j) (v) 8.0 18.0 (l) 22.5 18.0 (q)

18.0 (j) (v) ... 18.0 l) 21.5 18.0 (q)

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

4.0% ... 5.6 6 7.25 (b) (r)

42.5 (d) 160 118 59 (e) 87

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

2.9 6.0 ... 6.0 4.0

87 151 55 33.9 37

2.28 4.50 (i) 3.75 (i) 6.50 (i) 3.79 (i)

22.0 25.0 23.0 (t) 14.5 (k) (q) 7.5 (q)

20.5 26.0 22.0 (t) 27.3 (k) (q) 7.5 (q)

22.0 25.0 23.0 (t) 14.5 (k) (q) 7.5 (q) 16.0 (j) (q) 22.5 (p) (q) 20.1 (l) (q) 18.0 (l) (q) 19.0

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

4.0 6.0 6.25 (b) 6.0 5.0

140 57 98 (d) 55.5 36

5.98 (g) 4.50 (i) 2.68 (i) (g)

16.0 (j) (q) 25.0 (p) (q) 20.1 (j) (l) (q) 18.0 (l) (q) 20.5

16.0 (j) (q) 25.0 (p) (q) 22.6 (l) (q) 16.0 (l) (q) 22.5

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

5.3 6.0 4.0 5.0 5.0

79 3 (e) 36 100 100

2.50 (i) 1.92 (h)(i) 2.50 (i) (g) 1.50

24.0 17.4 (l) (m) (q) 20.0 25.2 (n) 23.5

26.0 24.0 14.4 (l) (m) (q)17.4 (l) (m) (q) 20.0 20.0 26.3(n) 25.2 (n) 24.25 23.5

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

5.0 6.0 6.5 7.0 4.225

151 200 48 18 17 (d)

4.05 (h) (i) (g) 5.03 (i) (g) 2.00

21 .0 19.0 (q) 20.0 18.4 (q) 17.03 (q)

21.0 15.0 (q) 20.0 18.4 (q) 17.03 (q)

21.0 19.0 (q) 20.0 18.4 (q) 17.03 (q)

170 64 80 52 240

(g) 3.75 3.60 (i) (g) 4.40

27.0 26.3 (i) (n) 23.0 (j) 19.5 (q) 14.5 (q)

27.75 26.3 (i) (n) 27.0 (j) 19.5 (q) 17.5 (q)

27.0 26.3 (i) (n) 23.0 (j) 19.5 (q) 14.5 (q)

18.9 (q) 23.2 (q) 26.85(m) (q) 21.0 26.0 (a) (q)

22.9 (q) 21.45 (q) 26.85(m) (q) 21.0 26.0 (a) (q)

18.9 (q) 23.2 (q) 26.85(m) (q) 21.0 26.0 (a) (q)

17.0 (q) 24.0 (j) 30.0 (q) 31.0 (q) 16.0

14.0 (q) 24.0 (j) 36.4 (q) 31.0 (q) 16.0

17.0 (q) 24.0 (j) 30.0 (q) 31.0 (q) 16.0 20.0 (j) 21.4 (j) (q) 20.0 24.5 20.0 (q)

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

... 5.5 6.5 ... 6.0

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

5.0 4.25 4.5 (u) 5.0 6.0

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

4.5 ... 6.0 7.0 5.0

91 150 (d) 5 44 55 103 118 135 246 7

6.06 6.44 (i) (g)(h) 2.50 (i) (g) 5.56 (i) (g) (g) 3.75 2.72 (i)

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

4.0 7.0 6.25 4.75 6.0

53 20 (d)(e) 41 69.5 119

3.93 (i) 4.40 (i) 2.40 (i) (g) (f) (g)

22.0 (j) 21.4 (j) (q) 20.0 24.5 20.0 (q)

22.0 (j) 18.4 (j) (q) 20.0 24.5 26.0 (q)

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

5.0 (r) 6.5 6.0 5.0 4.0 (b)

20 (d) (s) 142.5 55 77 60

(g) (g) (h) (g) 3.25 (g)

17.5 (j)(o) 28.0 (q) 27.0 (q) 29.1 (n) 14.0 (q)

16.0 (j)(o) 17.5 (j)(o) 28.0 (q) 28.0 (q) 27.0 (q) 27.0 (q) 29.1 (n) 29.128.5 (n) 14.0 (q) 14.0 (q)

Dist. of Columbia ...............

5.75

100

22.5

22.5

1.50 (i)

22.5

See footnotes at end of table.

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TAXES

STATE EXCISE TAX RATES — Continued Source: Compiled by The Federation of Tax Administrators from various sources, January 2005. Key: . . . — Tax is not applicable. (a) Effective July 1, 2004, tax rate is scheduled to invrease to 26 cents per gallon. (b) Tax rate may be adjusted annually according to a formaula based on balances in the unappropriated general fund and the school foundation fund. (c) The tax rates listed are fuel excise taxes collected by distributor/retailers in each state. Additional taxes may apply to motor carriers. (d) Counties and cities may impose an additional tax on a pack of cigarettes in Alabama, 1-6 cents; Illinois, 10-15 cents; Missouri, 4-7 cents; New York City,$1.50; Tennessee, 1 cent; and Virginia, 2-15 cents. (e) Dealers pay an additional enforcement and administrative fee of 0.1 cents per pack in Kentucky and 0.05 cents in Tennessee. In Arkansas, a fee of $1.25/1,000 cigarette fee is imposed. (f) 10 percent on-premise sales tax. (g) In 18 states, the government directly controls the sales of distilled spirits. Revenue in these states is generated from various taxes, fees and net liquor profits. (h) Sales tax is applied to on-premise sales only. (i) Other taxes in addition to excise taxes for the following states: Alaska, under 21 percent—$2.50/gallon; Arkansas, under 5 percent—$0.50/gallon, under 21 percent—$1.00/gallon, $0.20/case and 3 percent off—14 percent on-premise retail taxes; California, over 50 percent—$6.60/gallon; Connecticut, under 7 percent—$2.05/gallon; Delaware, under 25 percent— $2.50/ gallon; Florida, under 17.259 percent—$2.25/gallon, over 55.780 percent— $9.53/gallon, 6.67 cents/ounce on-premise retail tax; Georgia, $0.83/gallon local tax; Illinois, under 20 percent—$0.73/gallon,$1.845/gallon in Chicago and $2.00/gallon in Cook County; Indiana, under 15 percent—$0.47/gallon; Kansas, 8 percent off- and 10 percent on-premise retail tax; Kentucky, under 6 percent—$0.25/gallon, $0.05/case and 9 percent wholesale tax; Louisiana, under 6 percent - $0.32/gallon; Massachusetts, under 15 percent—$1.10/gallon, over 50 percent alcohol—$4.05/proof gallon, 0.57 percent on private club sales; Minnesota, $0.01/bottle (except miniatures) and 9 percent sales tax; Nebraska, petroleum fee—Nevada, under 14 percent —$0.70/gallon and under 21 percent—$1.30/gallon; New York, under 24 percent—$2.54/gallon, $1.00/gallon New York City; North Dakota, 7 percent state sales tax; Oklahoma, 13.5 percent on-premise; South Carolina, $5.36/case and 9 percent surtax; South Dakota, under 14 percent— $0.93/gallon, 2 percent wholesale tax;

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Tennessee, $0.15/case and 15 percent on-premise, under 7 percent—$1.21/ gallon; Texas, 14 percent on-premise and $0.05/drink on airline sales; and District of Columbia, 8 percent off- and 10 percent on-premise sales tax. (j) Tax rates do not include local option taxes. In Alabama, 1-3 cents and inspection fee; Hawaii, 8.8-18 cents; Illinois, 5 cents in Chicago and 6 cents in Cook County (gasoline only); Nevada 1.75 to 7.75 cents; Oregon, 1-3 cents; South Dakota, 1 cent; Tennessee, 1 cent; and Virginia, 2 percent. (k) Local taxes for gasoline and gasohol vary from9.7 cents to 17.7 cents. Plus a 2.07 cents/gallon pollution tax. (l) Carriers pay an additional surcharge equal to Arizona, 8 cents; Illinois, 6.3 cents (gasoline) and 6.0 cents (diesel); Indiana, 11 cents; Kentucky, 2 percent (gasoline) and 4.7 percent (diesel). (m) Tax rate is based on the average wholesale price and is adjusted quarterly. The actual rates are: Kentucky, 9 percent; and North Carolina, 17.5 cents plus 7 percent. (n) A portion of the rate is adjustable based on maintenance costs, sales volume, or cost of fuel to state government. (o) Large trucks pay an additional 3.5 cents. (p) Tax rate is reduced by the percentage of ethanol used in blending (reported rate assumes the maximum 10 percent ethanol). (q) Other taxes and fees; California-sales tax applicable; Florida—sales tax applicable; Georgia—3 percent sales tax applicable; Hawaii—sales tax applicable; Idaho—clean water tax; Illinois—sales tax applicable and environmental fee; Indiana—sales tax applicable; Kentucky—environmental fee; Michigan— sales tax applicable; Mississippi—environmental fee; Missouri— inspection fee; Nebraska—petroleum fee; New Hampshire—oil discharge cleanup fee; New Jersey—petroleum fee; New Mexico—Petroleum loading fee; New York- sales tax applicable; North Carolina- Inspection tax; Ohio— plus 3 cents commercial; Oklahoma—environmental fee; Pennsylvania- oil franchise tax; Rhode Island—leaking underground storage tank tax (LUST);Tennessee—petroleum tax and environmental fee; Vermont—petroleum cleanup fee; Washington—$0.5 percent privilege tax; West Virginia— sales tax added to excise; Wyoming—license tax. (r) Includes statewide local tax of 1.25 percent in California and 1.0 percent in Virginia. (s) Tax rate is scheduled to increase ot 30 cents per pack on July 1, 2005. (t) Plus 0.5 percent GRT. (u) tax rate scheduled to decrease to 4 percent after June 30, 2005. (v) Inspection fee.

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Table 7.3 FOOD AND DRUG SALES TAX EXEMPTIONS (As of January 1, 2005) Exemptions State or other jurisdiction

Tax rate (percentage)

Food (a)

Prescription drugs

Nonprescription drugs

Alabama ............................ Alaska ................................ Arizona .............................. Arkansas ........................... California (b)(c) ...............

4% none 5.6 6 7.25

... ... ★ ... ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

Colorado ........................... Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Florida ............................... Georgia ..............................

2.9 6 none 6 4

★ ★ ... ★ ★(d)

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

Hawaii ............................... Idaho .................................. Illinois ................................ Indiana .............................. Iowa ...................................

4 6 6.25 6 5

... ... 1 percent ★ ★

★ ★ 1percent ★ ★

... ... 1percent ... ...

Kansas ............................... Kentucky ........................... Louisiana .......................... Maine ................................. Maryland ..........................

5.3 6 4 5 5

... ★ ★ (d) ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ★

Massachusetts .................. Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................

5 6 6.5 7 4.225

★ ★ ★ ... 1.225

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ...

Montana ............................ Nebraska ........................... Nevada ............................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................

none 5.5 6.5 none 6

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

New Mexico ...................... New York ........................... North Carolina (f) ............ North Dakota .................... Ohio ...................................

5 4.25 4.5 5 6

★ ★ ★ (d) ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ...

Oklahoma ......................... Oregon ............................... Pennsylvania .................... Rhode Island .................... South Carolina .................

4.5 none 6 7 5

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ...

South Dakota .................... Tennessee .......................... Texas .................................. Utah ................................... Vermont ............................

4 7 6.25 4.75 6

... 6 percent ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ★ ... ★

Virginia (b) ....................... Washington ....................... West Virginia .................... Wisconsin .......................... Wyoming (c) .....................

5.0 6.5 6 5 4

4 percent (e) ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ...

Dist. of Columbia .............

5.75

Source: The Federation of Tax Administrators, January 2005. Key: ★— Yes, exempt from tax. . . . — Subject to general sales tax, (a) Some states tax food, but allow an (income) tax credit to compensate poor households. They are: Hawaii, Idaho, Kansas, South Dakota and Wyoming. (b) Includes statewide local tax of 1.25 percent in California and 1 percent in Virginia.

(c) The tax rate may be adjusted annually according to a formula based on balances in the unappropriated general fund and the school foundation fund. (d) Food sales are subject to local sales tax. (e) Tax rate on food is scheduled to decrease to 3.5 percent on 1/1/05. Statewide local tax is included. (f) Tax rate scheduled to decrease to 4 percent after 6/30/05.

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TAXES

Table 7.4 STATE INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAXES (Tax rates for the tax year 2005—as of January 1, 2005) State or other jurisdiction

Tax rate range (in percent) Low

High

Personal exemptions ($)

Income brackets ($) Low

High

Single

Married

Dependents

Federal income tax deductible

Alabama ...................... Alaska .......................... Arizona ........................ Arkansas (a) ............... California (a) ..............

2.0 – 5.0 3 500 (b) -------------------------------------------------------2.87 – 5.04 5 10,000 (b) 1.0 – 7.0 (e) 6 3,999 1.0 – 9.3 6 6,147(b)

– 3,000 (b) 1,500 3,000 300 (x) ------------------------------------------------------------------------– 150,000 (b) 2,100 4,200 2,300 – 28,500 20 (c) 40 (c) 20 (c) – 40,346 (b) 85 (c) 170 (c) 265 (c)

★ ... ... ... ...

Colorado ..................... Connecticut ................. Delaware ..................... Florida ......................... Georgia ........................

4.63 1 ---------- Flat rate ----------------------------- None ---------------------3.0 – 5 2 10,000 (b) – 10,000 (b) 12,750 (f) 24,500 (f) 0 2.2 – 5.95 6 5,000 – 60,000 110 (c) 220 (c) 110 (c) -------------------------------------------------------- (x) ------------------------------------------------------------------------1.0 – 6.0 6 750 (g) – 7,000 (g) 2,700 5,400 2,700

... ... ... ... ...

Hawaii ......................... Idaho (a) ...................... Illinois .......................... Indiana ........................ Iowa (a) .......................

1.4 – 1.6 – 3.0 3.4 0.36 –

8.25 7.8

8.98

9 8 1 1 9

Kansas ......................... Kentucky ..................... Louisiana .................... Maine (a) ..................... Maryland ....................

3.5 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0

– – – – –

6.45 6.0 6.0 8.5 4.75

3 5 3 4 4

15,000 (b) 3,000 12,500 (b) 4,350 (b) 1,000

Massachusetts ............ Michigan (a) ............... Minnesota (a) ............. Mississippi .................. Missouri ......................

5.3 3.9 5.35 – 3.0 – 1.5 –

7.85 5.0 6.0

1 1 3 3 10

Montana (a) ................ Nebraska (a) ............... Nevada ......................... New Hampshire .......... New Jersey ..................

2.0 – 6.9 7 2,300 2.56 – 6.84 4 2,400 (k) --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------1.4 – 6.37 6 20,000 (l)

New Mexico ................ New York ..................... North Carolina (o) ..... North Dakota ............. Ohio (a) .......................

1.7 – 4.0 – 6.0 – 2.1 – 0.743–

Oklahoma ................... Oregon (a) ................... Pennsylvania .............. Rhode Island .............. South Carolina (a) .....

0.5 – 6.65 (r) 8 1,000 (b) – 10,000 (b) 1,000 2,000 1,000 5.0 – 9.0 3 2,650 (b) – 6,550 (b) 154 (c) 308 (c) 154 (c) 3.07 1 ---------- Flat rate ----------------------------- None ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ (t) ------------------------------------------------------------------------2.5 – 7.0 6 2,460 – 12,300 3,200 (d) 6,400 (d) 3,200 (d)

★ (r) ★ (s) ... ... ...

South Dakota .............. Tennessee .................... Texas ............................ Utah (a) ....................... Vermont (a) .................

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------2.3 – 7.0 6 863 (b) 3.6 – 9.5 5 27,950 (v)

... ... ... ★ (u) ...

Virginia ....................... Washington ................. West Virginia .............. Wisconsin .................... Wyoming .....................

2.0 – 5.75 4 3,000 – 17,000 800 1,600 800 -------------------------------------------------------- (x) ------------------------------------------------------------------------3.0 – 6.5 5 10,000 – 60,000 2,000 4,000 2,000 4.6 – 6.75 4 8,840 (w) – 132,580 (w) 700 1,400 400 -------------------------------------------------------- (x) -------------------------------------------------------------------------

Dist. of Columbia ....... 4.5 – See footnotes at end of table.

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Number of brackets

6 7.7 8.25 5.54 (p) 7.5

9 (z)

4 7 4 5 9

3

2,000 (b) – 40,000 (b) 1,129 (h) – 22,577 (h) --------- Flat rate ------------------ Flat rate ---------1,242 – 55,890

1,040 3,200 (d) 2,000 1,000 40 (c)

2,080 6,400 (d) 4,000 2,000 80 (c)

1,040 3,200 (d) 2,000 1,000 40 (c)

... ... ... ... ★

30,000 (b) 8,000 25,000 (b) 17,350 (b) 3,000

2,250 20 (c) 4,500 (i) 2,850 2,400

4,500 40 (c) 9,000 (i) 5,700 4,800

2,250 20 (c) 1,000 (i) 2,850 2,400

... ... ★ ... ...

--------- Flat rate ------------------ Flat rate ---------19,010 (j) – 62,440 (j) 5,000 – 10,000 1,000 – 9,000

4,400 3,100 3,100 (d) 6,000 2,100

8,800 6,200 6,200 (d) 12,000 4,200

1,000 3,100 3,100 (d) 1,500 2,100

... ... ... ... ★ (s)

5,500 (m) 8,000 (n) 12,750 (o) 29,050 (p) 5,000

10,000

– – – – –

– 13,900 1,900 3,800 1,900 – 26,500 (k) 101 (c) 202 (c) 101 (c) (x) ------------------------------------------------------------------------(y) ------------------------------------------------------------------------– 75,000 (l) 1,000 2,000 1,500 – – – – –

(x) (y) (x) – –

16,000 (m) 500,000 (n) 120,000 (o) 319,100 (p) 200,000

3,200 (d) 0 3,200 (d) 3,200 (d) 1,300 (q)

6,400 (d) 0 6,400 (d) 6,400 (d) 2,600 (q)

------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------4,313 (b) 2,325 (d) 4,500 (d) 2,400 (d) 307,050 (v) 3,100 (d) 6,200 (d) 3,100 (d)

30,000

1,370

2,740

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3,200 (d) 1,000 3,200 (d) 3,200 (d) 1,300 (q)

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1,370

★ ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ... ...


TAXES

STATE INDIVIDUAL INCOME TAXES — Continued Source: The Federation of Tax Administrators from various sources, January 2005. Key: ★—Yes . . .—No (a) Eight states have statutory provision for automatic adjustment of tax brackets, personal exemption or standard deductions to the rate of inflation. Michigan, Nebraska and Ohio indexes the personal exemption amounts only. (b) For joint returns, the taxes are twice the tax imposed on half the income. (c) Tax credits. (d) These states allow personal exemption or standard deductions as provided in the Internal Revenue Code. Utah allows a personal exemption equal to three–fourths the federal exemptions. (e) Plus a three percent surtax. A special tax table is available for low income taxpayers reducing their tax payments. (f) Combined personal exemptions and standard deduction. An additional tax credit is allowed ranging from 75 percent to 0 percent based on state adjusted gross income. Exemption amounts are phased out for higher income taxpayers until they are eliminated for households earning over $54,500. (g) The tax brackets reported are for single individuals. For married households filing separately, the same rates apply to income brackets ranging from $500 to $5,000; and the income brackets range from $1,000 to $10,000 for joint filers. (h) For joint returns, the tax is twice the tax imposed on half of the income. A $10 filing tax is charged for each return and a $15 credit is allowed for each exemption. (i) Combined personal exemption and standard deduction. (j) The tax brackets reported are for single individual. For married couples filing jointly, the same rates apply for income under $27,780 to over $110,390. (k) The tax brackets reported are for single individuals. For married couples filing jointly, the same rates apply for income under $4,000 to over $46,750. (l) The tax brackets reported are for single individuals. For married individuals filing jointly, the same rates apply for income under $20,000 to over $150,000.

(m) The tax brackets reported are for single individuals. For married couples filing jointly, the same rates apply for income under $8,000 to over $40,000. Married households filing separately pay the tax imposed on half the income. Tax rate is scheduleed to decrease in tax year 2005. (n) The tax brackets reported are for single individuals. For married taxpayers, the same rates apply to income brackets ranging from $16,000 to $500,000. (o) The tax brackets reported are for single individuals. For married taxpayers, the same rates apply to income brackets ranging from $21,250 to $200,000. Lower exemption amounts allowed for high income taxpayers. Tax rates scheduled to decrease after year 2003. (p) The tax brackets reported are for single individuals. For married taxpayers, the same rates apply to income brackets ranging from $47,450 to $311,950. An additional $300 personal exemption is allowed for joint returns or unmarried heads of households. (q) Plus an additional $20 per exemption tax credit. (r) The rate range reported is for single persons not deducting federal income tax. For married persons filing jointly, the same rates apply to income brackets ranging from $2,000 to $21,000. Separate schedules, with rates ranging from 0.5 percent to 10 percent, apply to taxpayers deducting federal income taxes. (s) Deduction is limited to $10,000 for joint returns and $5,000 for individuals in Missouri and to $5,000 in Oregon. (t) Twenty–five percent federal tax liability. Federal income tax liability prior to the Economic Growth and Tax Relief Act of 2001. (u) One half of the federal income taxes are deductible. (v) The tax brackets reported are for single individuals. For married couples filing jointly, the same rates apply for income under $46,700 to over $307,050. (w) The tax brackets reported are for single individuals. For married taxpayers, the same rates apply to income brackets ranging from $11,240 to $168,560. An additional $250 exemption is provided for each taxpayer or spouse age 65 or over. (x) No state income tax. (y) State income tax is limited to dividends and interest income only. (z) Tax rate decreases are scheduled for tax year 2005.

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TAXES

Table 7.5 STATE PERSONAL INCOME TAXES: FEDERAL STARTING POINTS (As of January 1, 2004) State or other jurisdiction

Relation to Internal Revenue Code ... (a) 1/1/04 ... 11/11/03

... (a) Federal adjusted gross income ... Federal adjusted gross income

Colorado ............................ Connecticut ........................ Delaware ............................ Florida ................................ Georgia ...............................

Current Current Current (a) 1/1/04

Federal taxable income Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income (a) Federal adjusted gross income

Hawaii ................................ Idaho ................................... Illinois ................................. Indiana ............................... Iowa ....................................

12/31/03 1/1/04 Current 1/1/03 1/1/04

Federal taxable income Federal taxable income Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income

Kansas ................................ Kentucky ............................ Louisiana ........................... Maine .................................. Maryland ...........................

Current 12/31/01 Current 5/28/03 Current

Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income

Massachusetts ................... Michigan ............................ Minnesota .......................... Mississippi ......................... Missouri .............................

Current Current (b) 6/15/03 ... Current

Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income Federal taxable income ... Federal adjusted gross income

Montana ............................. Nebraska ............................ Nevada ................................ New Hampshire ................. New Jersey .........................

Current 4/15/04 (a) (c) ...

Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income (a) (c) ...

New Mexico ....................... New York ............................ North Carolina .................. North Dakota .................... Ohio ....................................

Current Current 5/1/04 Current Current

Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income Federal taxable income Federal taxable income Federal adjusted gross income

Oklahoma .......................... Oregon ................................ Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... South Carolina ..................

Current Current ... 6/3/01 12/31/02

Federal adjusted gross income Federal taxable income ... Federal adjusted gross income Federal taxable income

South Dakota ..................... Tennessee ........................... Texas ................................... Utah .................................... Vermont .............................

(a) (c) (a) Current 1/1/02

(a) (c) (a) Federal taxable income Federal taxable income

Virginia .............................. Washington ........................ West Virginia ..................... Wisconsin ........................... Wyoming ............................

12/31/03 (a) 1/1/04 12/31/02 (a)

Federal adjusted gross income (a) Federal adjusted gross income Federal adjusted gross income (a)

Dist. of Columbia ..............

Current

Source: Compiled by the Federation of Tax Administrators from various sources, January 2005. Key: . . .—State does not employ a federal starting point. Current—Indicates state has adopted the Internal Revenue Code as cur-

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Tax base

Alabama ............................. Alaska ................................. Arizona ............................... Arkansas ............................ California ...........................

Federal adjusted gross income rently in effect. Dates indicate state has adopted the IRC as amended to that date. (a) No state income tax. (b) Or 1/1/99, taxpayer’s option. (c) On interest and dividends only.

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Table 7.6 RANGE OF STATE CORPORATE INCOME TAX RATES (For tax year 2005—as of January 1, 2005) State or other jurisdiction

Tax rate (percent)

Tax brackets Lowest

Highest

Number of brackets

Tax rate (a) (percent) financial institution

Federal income tax deductible

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

6.5 1.0–9.4 6.968 (b) 1.0–6.5 8.84 (c)

----------------- Flat Rate ----------------10,000 90,000 ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------3,000 100,000 ----------------- Flat Rate -----------------

1 10 1 6 1

6.5 1.0–9.4 6.968 (b) 1.0–6.5 10.84 (c)

★ ... ... ... ...

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

4.63 7.5 (d) 8.7 5.5 (f) 6.0

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Flat Rate ----------------Flat Rate ----------------Flat Rate ----------------Flat Rate ----------------Flat Rate -----------------

1 1 1 1 1

4.63 7.5 (d) 8.7–1.7 (e) 5.5 (f) 6.0

... ... ... ... ...

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

4.4–6.4 (g) 7.6 (h) 7.3 (i) 8.5 6.0–12.0

25,000 100,000 ----------------- Flat Rate --------------------------------- Flat Rate --------------------------------- Flat Rate ----------------25,000 250,000

3 1 1 1 4

7.92 (g) 7.6 (h) 7.3 (i) 8.5 5.0

... ... ... ... ★(k)

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

4.0 (l) 4.0–8.25 4.0–8.0 3.5–8.93 (m) 7.0

----------------- Flat Rate ----------------25,000 250,000 25,000 200,000 25,000 250,000 ----------------- Flat Rate -----------------

1 5 5 4 1

2.25 (l) (a) (a) 1.0 7.0

... ... ★ ... ...

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

9.5 (n) ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 10.5 (n) ... ----------------------------------------------------------------- See Note -------------------------------------------------------------------9.8 (o) ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 9.8 (o) ... 3.0–5.0 5,000 10,000 3 3.0–5.0 ... 6.25 ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 7.0 ★(k)

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

6.75 (p) ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 6.75 (p) ... 5.58–7.81 50,000 2 (a) ... ----------------------------------------------------------------- See Note -------------------------------------------------------------------8.5 (q) ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 8.5 (q) ... 9.0 (r) ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 9.0 (r) ...

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

4.8–7.6 7.5 (s) 6.9 (t) 2.6-7.0 5.1–8.5 (u)

500,000 1 million ----------------- Flat Rate --------------------------------- Flat Rate ----------------3,000 30,000 50,000

3 1 1 5 2

4.8–7.6 7.5 (s) 6.9 (t) 7.0 (b) (u)

... ... ... ★ ...

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

6.0 6.6 (b) 9.99 9.0 (b) 5.0

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1 1 1 1 1

6.0 6.6 (b) (a) 9.0 (v) 4.5 (w)

... ... ... ... ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

... ... ... 6.0–0.25 (b) ... 6.5 ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 6.5 ... ----------------------------------------------------------------- See Note -------------------------------------------------------------------5.0 (b) ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------... 5.0 (b) ... 7.0–9.75 (b) 10,000 250,000 4 7.0–9.75 (b) ...

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

6.0 ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 6.0 (x) ... ----------------------------------------------------------------- See Note -------------------------------------------------------------------9.0 ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 9.0 ... 7.9 ----------------- Flat Rate ----------------1 7.9 ... ----------------------------------------------------------------- See Note --------------------------------------------------------------------

Dist. of Columbia ...............

9.975 (y)

Flat Rate ----------------Flat Rate ----------------Flat Rate ----------------Flat Rate ----------------Flat Rate -----------------

----------------- Flat Rate -----------------

...

9.975 (y)

...

See footnotes at end of table.

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TAXES

RANGE OF STATE CORPORATE INCOME TAX RATES — Continued Source: Compiled by the Federation of Tax Administrators from various sources, January 2005. Key: ★—Yes . . .—No Note: Michigan imposes a single business tax (sometimes described as a business activities tax or value added tax) of 1.9% on the sum of federal taxable income of the business, compensation paid to employees, dividends, interest, royalties paid and other items. Similarly, Texas imposes a franchise tax of 4.5% of earned surplus or 2.5 mills of net worth. Nevada, Washington, and Wyoming do not have state corporate income taxes. (a) Rates listed include the corporate tax rate applied to financial institutions or excise taxes based on income. Some states have other taxes based upon the value of deposits or shares. (b) Minimum tax is $50 in Arizona, $50 in North Dakota (banks), $10 in Oregon, $250 in Rhode Island, $500 per location in South Dakota (banks), $100 in Utah, $250 in Vermont. (c) Minimum tax is $800. The tax rate on S-Corporations is 1.5% (3.5% for banks). (d) Or 3.1 mills per dollar of capital stock and surplus (maximum tax $1 million) or $250. (e) The marginal rate decreases over 4 brackets ranging from $20 to $650 million in taxable income. Building and loan associations are taxed at a flat 8.7%. (f) Or 3.3% Alternative Minimum Tax. An exemption of $5,000 is allowed. (g) Capital gains are taxed at 4%. There is also an alternative tax of 0.5% of gross annual sales. (h) Minimum tax is $20. An additional tax of $10 is imposed on each return. (i) Includes a 2.5% personal property replacement tax. (k) Fifty percent of the federal income tax is deductible. (l) Plus a surtax of 3.35% (2.125% for banks) taxable income in excess of $50,000 ($25,000). (m) Or, the Maine Alternative Minimum Tax. (n) Rate includes a 14% surtax, as does the following: an additional tax of $7.00 per $1,000 on taxable tangible property (or net worth allocable to state, for intangible property corporations); minimum tax of $456. (o) Plus a 5.8% tax on any Alternative Minimum Taxable Income over the base tax. (p) A 7% tax on taxpayers using water’s edge combination. Minimum tax

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is $50. (q) Plus a 0.50 percent tax on the enterprise base (total compensation, interest and dividends paid). Business profits tax imposed on both corporations and unincorporated associations. (r) The rate reported in the table is the corporation business franchise tax rate. The minimum tax is $500. An Alternative Minimum Assessment based on Gross Receipts applies if greater than corporate franchise tax. Corporations not subject to the franchise tax are subject to a 7.25% income tax. Banking and financial corporations are subject to the franchise tax. Corporations with net income under $100,000 are taxed at 6.5%. The tax on S corporations is being phased out through 2007. The tax rate on a New Jersey S corporation that has entire net income not subject to federal corporate income tax in excess of $100,000 will remain at 1.33% for privilege periods ending on or before June 30, 2006. The rate will be 0.67% for privilege periods ending on or after July 1, 2006, but on or before June 30, 2007; and there will be no tax imposed for privilege periods ending on or after July 1, 2007. The tax on S corporation with entire net income not subject to federal corporate income tax of $100,00 or less is eliminated for privilege periods ending on or after July 1, 2007. (s) Or 1.78 mills per dollar of capital (up to $350,000); or a 2.5% alternative minimum tax; or a minimum tax of $10,000 to $100 depending on payroll size; if any of these is greater than the tax computed on net income. Small corporations with income under $290,000 are subject to lower rates of tax on net income. An additional tax of 0.9 mills per dollar of subsidiary capital is imposed on corporations. For banks, the alternative bases of tax are 3% of alternative net income; or up to 1/50th mill of taxable assets; or a minimum tax of $250. (t) Financial institutions are also subject to a tax equal to $30 per one million in assets. (u) Or 5.82 mills time the value of the taxpayer’s issued and outstanding share of stock with a maximum payment of $150,000. An additional litter tax is imposed equal to 0.11% on the first $50,000 of taxable income, 0.22% on income over $50,000; or 0.14 mills on net worth. A $50 to $1,000 minimum tax applies, depending on worldwide gross receipts. (v) For banks, the alternative tax is $2.50 per $10,000 of capital stock ($100 minimum). (w) Savings and Loans are taxed at a 6% rate. (x) State and national banks subject to the state’s franchise tax on net capital is exempt from the income tax. (y) Minimum tax is $100. Includes surtax.

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TAXES

Table 7.7 PROPERTY TAXES BY STATE AND REGION: 2002 AND 2003 (In thousands of dollars) State or other jurisdiction

Year: 2003 Quarter: 1

Year: 2003 Quarter: 2

Year: 2003 Quarter: 3

Year: 2003 Quarter: 4

Year 2002 Quarter: 1

Year: 2002 Quarter: 2

Year: 2002 Quarter: 2

Eastern Region Connecticut .............. Delaware .................. Maine ....................... Massachusetts .......... New Hampshire ....... New Jersey ............... New York ................. Pennsylvania ............ Rhode Island ............ Vermont .................... Regional average .....

(c) (c) 368 48 487,636 (a) 0 (c) 4,033 0 131,342 (a) 62,343

(c) (c) 29,711 21 (b) 8,692 2 (a) (c) 50,332 847 (a) 103,929 19,343

(c) (c) 16,694 2 (a) 4,843 6 (c) 9,321 (b) 16 103,929 13,481

(c) (c) -109 10 3,135 240 (a) (c) 8,288 (b) 0 (a) 103,929 (a) 11,549

(c) (c) 422 53 (a) 480,326 (a) 0 (a) (c) 2,971 (a) 470 (a) 91,654 (a) 57,590

(c) (c) 30,415 (a) 20 (a) 10,811 (a) 0 (a) (c) 41,546 (a) 669 (a) 114,232 (a) 19,769

(c) (c) 13,265 2 (a) 4,926 0 (c) 9,359 (a) 0 91,467 (a) 11,902

Midwestern Region Illinois ...................... Indiana ..................... Iowa .......................... Kansas ...................... Michigan .................. Minnesota ................ Nebraska .................. North Dakota ........... Ohio .......................... South Dakota ........... Wisconsin ................. Regional average .....

15,267 1,427 (c) 23,173 710,514 4,783 30 1,250 270 (a) (c) 46,008 (a) 72,975

14,843 314 (c) 5,676 191,186 46 1,596 121 36,176 (c) 14,813 24,070

12,435 (a) 1,484 (a) (c) 17,537 869,305 (a) 70 (a) 49 14 2,500 (a) (c) 1,555 (a) 82,268

14,683 (a) 1,518 (c) 9,773 1,055,186 270,122 (a) 1,392 56 376 (a) (c) 14,696 124,346

14,816 1,550 (c) 22,115 632,222 (a) 5,496 (a) 1,596 (a) 1,155 1,264 (a) (c) 42,788 (a) 65,727

12,747 (a) 2,204 (c) 7,755 (a) 175,895 (a) 233 (a) 1,596 (a) 154 14,896 (a) (c) 14,482 (a) 20,906

14,096 1,139 (a) (c) 16,459 (a) 411,687 (a) 102 (a) 2,105 12 2,083 (a) (c) 106 (b) 40,708

12,523 1,627 (c) 9,480 656,488 2,897 1,543 53 206 (c) 13,849 (b) 63,515

Southern Region Alabama ................... Arkansas ................... Florida ...................... Georgia ..................... Kentucky .................. Louisiana .................. Maryland .................. Mississippi ............... Missouri ................... North Carolina ......... Oklahoma ................. South Carolina ......... Tennessee ................. Texas ........................ Virginia .................... West Virginia ........... Regional average .....

111,398 10,654 184,176 20,535 114,022 6,140 3,823 26,724 (b) 18,597 (b) 0 (c) 4,346 (a) (c) (c) -26 307 31,294

12,454 124,240 128,132 5,995 56,173 9,689 (a) 7,847 247 826 0 (c) 858 (c) (c) 103,929 (a) 688 28,192

9,927 (a) 56,029 22,710 7,246 41,013 11,108 371,546 513 (a) 488 (a) 0 (c) 30 (c) (c) 78 1,169 32,616

78,244 30,372 (a) 20,100 (a) 31,182 224,439 11,108 102,796 9,080 3,081 0 (c) 1,178 (c) (c) 774 827 32,074

109,815 18,766 (a) 190,749 24,070 109,973 8,270 30,684 (a) 25,527 (a) 17,106 (a) 0 (c) 6,358 (a) (c) (c) 25 737 24,156

12,308 115,200 (a) 177,042 3,992 (a) 56,972 (a) 8,720 (a) 14,328 (a) 232 (a) 783 (a) 0 (c) 2,604 (a) (c) (c) 22,343 (a) 1,003 (a) 25,964

9,639 60,899 (a) 21,980 (a) 6,084 47,104 6,140 (a) 233,706 484 431 0 (c) 595 (a) (c) (c) 99 1,497 (a) 9,115

70,755 273,162 35,793 28,526 219,271 6,140 43,513 14 (b) 2,864 (b) 0 (c) 3,199(b) (c) (c) 0 1,034 34,674

10 82,929 (a) 551,180 (b) (c) (c) (c) 40,562 44,288 27,297 5,628 (c) 467,362 25,993 95,788

48,190 (a) 82,929 585,420 (c) (c) (c) 78,777 37,060 9,559 6,811 (c) 403,472 (b) 50,797 100,232

602 82,929 505,011 (a) (c) (c) (c) 14,640 22,130 (a) 4,035 7,110 (c) 417,025 10,292 81,829

-37 82,929 419,565 (a) (c) (c) (c) 63,977 21,176 9,207 3,289 (c) 293,613 65,321 73,772

-35 82,311 (a) 526,487 (a) (c) (c) (c) 41,481 (a) 22,840 (a) 700 (b) 5,059 (c) 428,883 (a) 21,399 (a) 86,856

48,631 82,311 (a) 550,965 (a) (c) (c) (c) 75,183 (a) 44,003 (a) 169 (b) 6,788 (a) (c) 382,334 (a) 50,936 (a) 95,486

460 82,928 (a) 532,860 (c) (c) (c) 12,546 2,917 18 (b) 6,788 (c) 400,114 6,095 86,553

81 82,928 498,648 (a) (c) (c) (c) 51,922 (b) 25,892 39,398 (b) 6,958 (c) 315,465 67,096 85,108

Western Region Alaska ...................... Arizona ..................... California ................. Colorado ................... Hawaii ...................... Idaho ........................ Montana ................... Nevada ..................... New Mexico ............. Oregon ...................... Utah .......................... Washington .............. Wyoming .................. Regional Average .... Regional Average without California ... Washington D.C. .....

57,839

59,800

46,564

44,956

248,823

159,020

412,873

4,113

Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of the Census, October 2004. Note: Property taxes as defined by the Census Bureau; refer to real property (e.g., land and structures) as well as personal property; either tangible (e.g., automobiles and boats) or intangible (e.g., bank accounts and bonds). For additional information consult http://www.census.gov/govs/www/

50,220 189,972 (a)

57,530 157,905 (a)

Year: 2002 Quarter: 2 (c) (c) 3,509 10 3,627 0 (c) 7,970 0 92,263 10,738

45,979

47,513

355,823

24,319

class_ch7_tax.html. Key: (a)—Revised (b)—Estimated (c)—No tax in state

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BUDGETS

Table 7.8 FISCAL 2004 STATE GENERAL FUND, PRELIMINARY ACTUAL, BY REGION (In millions of dollars) State or other jurisdiction

Beginning balance

Revenues

Adjustments

Resources

Expenditures

Adjustments

Budget stabilization fund

Eastern Region Connecticut (g) .................. Delaware (a) ...................... Maine ................................. Massachusetts (a) .............. New Hampshire ................. New Jersey (a) ................... New York (a) (w) ............... Pennsylvania (aa) .............. Rhode Island (bb) .............. Vermont (hh) ...................... Regional totals ...................

$0 464 37 752 0 373 815 209 50 0 2,700

$12,881 2,736 2,621 23,196 1,321 24,383 42,327 21,813 2,841 922 135,041

$0 0 0 0 0 6 -1,900 130 -58 51 —

$12,881 3,200 2,658 23,949 1,321 24,761 41,242 22,152 2,834 973 135,971

$12,678 2,554 2,643 22,470 1,305 23,939 42,065 21,926 2,790 915 133,285

0 0 0 0 0 0 -1,900 150 0 58 —

202 646 15 1,479 16 822 1,077 77 44 0 4,176

$202 137 0 872 0 288 794 260 87 45 2,685

Midwestern Region Illinois (j) ........................... Indiana (k) .......................... Iowa (l) ............................... Kansas (m) ......................... Michigan (q) ...................... Minnesota (a) (r) ................ Nebraska (u) ...................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio (y) .............................. South Dakota (dd) ............. Wisconsin (a) (kk) ............. Regional totals ...................

317 442 0 123 174 369 3 15 52 0 -282 1,213

23,081 10,684 4,513 4,519 8,076 14,289 2,720 956 24,031 852 11,041 104,762

3,598 409 0 3 457 0 30 0 0 40 0 —

26,996 11,535 4,513 4,644 8,707 14,658 2,752 971 24,083 892 10,759 110,510

22,632 11,244 4,561 4,317 8,695 13,734 2,576 894 23,839 889 10,654 104,035

4,182 0 -73 0 0 0 0 0 87 3 0 —

182 291 26 327 12 924 177 77 157 0 105 2,278

276 242 0 0 0 410 87 9 181 158 0 1,363

Southern Region Alabama (b) ....................... Arkansas ............................. Florida ................................ Georgia (a) (h) ................... Kentucky (n) ...................... Louisiana (o) ...................... Maryland (p) ...................... Mississippi (s) .................... Missouri (t) ........................ North Carolina (x) ............ Oklahoma (z) ..................... South Carolina (a) (cc) ...... Tennessee (ee) ................... Texas (ff) ............................ Virginia .............................. West Virginia (jj) ............... Regional totals ...................

113 0 682 1,268 163 0 123 41 216 251 34 46 64 88 328 196 3,613

5,560 3,526 23,170 16,080 7,087 6,765 9,994 3,582 6,934 14,691 5,124 5,116 8,688 29,465 12,333 3,083 161,198

120 0 0 0 371 61 376 -29 0 246 -223 0 15 234 0 40 —

5,792 3,526 23,852 17,348 7,620 6,826 10,493 3,594 7,150 15,187 4,936 5,162 8,767 29,787 12,660 3,319 166,019

5,491 3,526 21,542 16,265 7,294 6,743 10,262 3,591 6,662 14,704 4,833 4,865 8,357 29,434 12,387 3,019 158,975

40 0 0 0 77 38 0 0 0 195 0 243 61 -628 0 10 —

261 0 2,310 1,083 250 45 230 3 488 287 102 55 349 981 274 291 7,009

104 0 966 0 51 0 497 43 222 267 209 25 217 366 0 54 3,021

0 192 1,607 217 117 16 43 108 245 93 16 405 4 3,063

2,023 6,467 76,582 6,045 3,908 2,098 1,376 2,305 4,647 4,908 3,685 11,345 790 126,179

278 225 2,571 -227 0 -26 0 49 133 0 -33 208 -2 —

2,301 6,884 80,760 6,035 4,025 2,087 1,419 2,461 5,025 5,001 3,668 11,958 792 132,416

2,301 6,517 77,634 5,689 3,840 1,987 1,287 2,320 4,383 5,479 3,569 11,452 788 127,246

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 162 0 46 0 0 —

0 368 3,127 346 185 100 132 141 480 -478 53 506 4 208

2,109 14 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 67 0 246 4,964

1,456

49,597

51,656

49,612

1,837

2,437

Western Region Alaska (c) ........................... Arizona (d) ......................... California (a) (e) ................ Colorado (f) ....................... Hawaii ................................ Idaho (i) ............................. Montana ............................. Nevada (v) ......................... New Mexico (a) ................. Oregon ................................ Utah (gg) ............................ Washington (ii) .................. Wyoming (ll) ...................... Regional totals ................... Regional totals without California .......... See footnotes at end of table.

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Ending balance

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BUDGETS

FISCAL 2004 STATE GENERAL FUND, PRELIMINARY ACTUAL, BY REGION — Continued Source: National Association of State Budget Officers, Fiscal Survey of States, December 2004. Note: For all states, unless otherwise noted, transfers into budget stabilization funds are counted as expenditures and transfers from budget stabilization funds are counted as revenues. Key: N.A.—Not available. (a) In these states, the ending balance includes the balance in the budget stabilization fund. (b) Revenue adjustments reflect a $75.6 million transfer from the Federal Fiscal Relief Fund, $19.7 million of SWAP agreements, $14.5 million from the cigarette tax, $3.2 million from the removal of the contractor’s sales tax exemption, and $6.9 million from civil court cost increases. Expenditure adjustments reflect $39.8 million from the Medicaid Supplemental State General Fund appropriation. (c) Revenue adjustments reflect a constitutional budget reserve (CBR) draw. (d) Revenue adjustments represent fund transfers, federal cash assistance, a judicial collections program, a tax amnesty program and settlement monies from a lawsuit. (e) The revenue adjustment is a prior year revenue adjustment of $2,570.7 million. (f) Revenue adjustments include diversions to the State Education Fund and the Older Coloradoans Program, as well as transfers to the General Fund to mitigate revenue declines. Ending balance is $122.7 million above the statutory reserve requirement. Current law requires monies in excess of the statutory reserve to be credited to the Highway User’s Tax Fund and the Capital Construction Fund. (g) A portion of the fiscal 2004 general fund surplus was transferred to balance the general fund in fiscal 2005. In fiscal 2004, the state ended the year with and ending balance of $202.2 million. This amount is included in the budget stabilization fund. (h) The tobacco tax increase provided $180 million in additional revenue. (i) Revenue adjustments include $0.4 million in transfers from other funds and $26.2 million in transfers to other funds. (j) Revenue adjustments include $2,109 million transfers into general funds and $1,489 million of pension obligation reimbursements transfers-in. Expenditure adjustments include accounts payable pay-down of $673 million, $1,416 million to repay short-term borrowing that came due in fiscal year 2004, and transfers-out of $2,093 million. (k) Revenue adjustments reflect one-time transfers from dedicated funds and the federal Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003 and the Rainy Day Fund. (l) In October 2003, Governor Vilsack initiated a 2.5 percent across-theboard cut in allotments, for a total reduction of $82.5 million, to bring the General Fund into balance after the October 10, 2003 Revenue Estimating Conference meeting. In June 2004, Governor Vilsack rescinded 10 percent of the cut, or $8.3 million, resulting in a net across-the-board cut of 2.25 percent, or $74.2 million, for fiscal 2004. A supplemental appropriation also was passed during the 2004 legislative session, totaling $1 million. (m) Revenue adjustments reflect released encumbrances. n) Revenue includes $109.5 million in Tobacco Settlement funds. Revenue adjustments include $102.2 million that represents appropriation balances carried over from the prior fiscal year. $199.9 from fund transfers into the General Fund, and $68.7 Federal Fiscal Relief funds. Expenditure adjustments represent appropriation balances forwarded to the next fiscal year. (o) Revenue adjustments include $19.2 million in carry-forwards, $4 million in non-recurring funds, the use of $7.5 million of fund balances and $29 million from premiums generated on bond sales. Expenditure adjustments include $35.2 million in carry-forwards. (p) Revenue adjustments reflect transfers from other funds. (q) Fiscal 2004 revenue adjustments include federal and state tax law changes (-$209.6 million); unrestricted federal aid ($169 million); a revenue sharing freeze ($278.5 million); prior year work projects ($35.1 million); drivers license fees and fines ($50.1 million); escheats law change ($15 million); casino tax increase ($3.6 million); other revenue adjustments (-$34.5 million); deposits from state restricted funds ($84.2 million); and pending legislative action to repeal pharmaceutical tax credit ($10 million). The estimated ending balance will likely be expended by fiscal year end close. (r) The ending balance includes budget reserve of $409.7 million. (s) Revenue adjustments include a fiscal 2003 year-end transfer of $29.1 million to the Working Cash Stabilization Reserve Fund. (t) Revenues are net of refunds. Refunds for Fiscal 2004 totaled $1,075.3 million. Revenues include the following: $229.9 million transferred to the General Revenue Fund. $84.7 million from bond proceeds for capital improvement projects, and $274.1 million of Federal Fiscal Relief pursuant to the Jobs and Growth Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2003. (u) Revenue adjustments are transfers between the General Fund and other funds. (v) The fiscal 2003 ending balance and fiscal 2004 beginning balance differ due to rounding. Fiscal 2004 figures reflect legislatively approved amounts. (w) The ending balance includes $794 million in the tax stabilization reserve fund (rainy day fund), $262 million in the Community Projects Fund and $21 million in reserve funds for litigation risks. Revenue and expenditure adjust-

ments reflect $1.9 billion in deferred spending from fiscal 2002-2003 to fiscal 2003-2004 due to the timing of the state’s tobacco securitization transaction. (x) Revenue adjustments include $136.9 million of Federal Fiscal Relief and $108.8 million of funds originally appropriated for Hurricane Floyd recovery. Expenditure adjustments include $116.7 million transfer to the Rainy Day Fund and a $78.8 transfer to the Repair and Renovation Reserve. (y) Federal reimbursements for Medicaid and other human services programs are included in the general revenue fund. Beginning balances are unreserved fund balances. The actual cash balances would be higher by the amount reserved for encumbrances and designated transfers from the general fund revenue fund. Expenditures for fiscal 2004 do not include encumbrances outstanding at the end of the year. Ohio reports expenditures based on disbursements for the general revenue fund. Expenditure adjustments reflect miscellaneous transfers-out of $55.3 million. These transfers-out are adjusted for an anticipated net change in encumbrances from fiscal 2003 levels of $31.4 million. (z) Revenue adjustments reflect a rainy day fund deposit of $208.8 million and an increase to the General Revenue Fund cash-flow reserve of $14.2 million. (aa) Revenue adjustments include $142.5 million in prior year lapses and a -$13 million adjustment to the beginning balance. total expenditures reflect the total amount appropriated plus supplemental appropriations. Expenditure adjustments reflect projected current-year lapses and the statutory transfer of $190 million to the budget stabilization (rainy day) fund. (bb) Revenue adjustments reflect a contribution to budget stabilization fund. (cc) Expenditure adjustments reflect funds applied to the fiscal 2003 and fiscal 2002 deficits. (dd) Revenue adjustments reflect $22.8 million of one-time receipts, $16 million transferred from the Property Tax Reduction Fund to cover the budget shortfall, and $1.4 million obligated cash carried forward from fiscal 2003. Expenditure adjustments reflect $1.4 million transferred to the Budget Reserve Fund from the prior year’s obligated cash and $1.2 million of obligated cash to the Budget Reserve Fund. (ee) Tennessee’s ending balance is committed to fund one-time appropriations in the next fiscal year. It is not an uncommitted balance. Revenue adjustments reflect $28 million transfer from the debt service fund reserve, a $25.5 million transfer from debt service fund unexpended appropriations, and a -$39 million transfer to the rainy day fund. Expenditure adjustments reflect a $21 million transfer to the Transportation Equity Fund, a $27 million transfer to the capital outlay projects fund, and $12.2 million for dedicated appropriations. (ff) Revenue information is from the Comptroller’s December 2003 certification revenue estimate, updated to reflect the Comptroller’s April 2004 revised revenue estimate. Revenue adjustments reflect dedicated account balances. Total expenditures are 2004 appropriated as reported by the Legislative Budget Board. Total expenditures include $345 million held in reserve for transfer to the Rainy Day Fund and other adjustments to reconcile the actual ending balance reported by the Comptroller. (gg) Revenue adjustments include: $35.6 million reserve from prior fiscal year, $14 million lapsing balances from agencies, $9.8 million transfer from tobacco settlement funds, $10.2 million transfers from various restricted accounts, $5.2 million industrial assistance fund reserve from previous fiscal year, $3.4 million from other miscellaneous sources, ($4.3 million) transfer to the Rainy Day Fund per statute, and ($107.2 million) reserve for following year. Year-end revenues were $94.5 million higher than estimated largely due to better anticipated sales and income tax receipts. $34.8 million of these surplus revenues were transferred to the rainy day fund per statute. The remaining $11.0 million of expenditure adjustments were various minor year-end closing entries. (hh) Revenue adjustments reflect a $28.9 million 2003 Act 68 sales tax implementation, -$1.3 million Vermont Economic Development Authority debt forgiveness, $17.3 million direct applications and transfers in, $5.9 million additional property transfer tax to the general fund. Expenditure adjustments include $1.3 million (net) to the human services caseload reserve. $4.5 million to the transportation fund, $1.7 million to the general bond fund, $2 million to the health access trust fund, $10.5 million to internal service funds, $1 million to miscellaneous other funds, $20.9 million to the budget stabilization reserve, and $15.5 million to the general fund surplus reserve. (ii) Revenue adjustments represent transfers from other accounts to the General Fund. (jj) The beginning balance reflects $146.4 million of reappropriations, $8.3 million of surplus appropriations, and a $41.3 million unappropriated surplus balance. Revenue adjustments reflect a $39.8 million transfer from special revenue, and $0.1 million in prior year redeposits. Expenditures reflect $2,898.8 million of regular appropriations, $74 million of reappropriations, $14.7 million of surplus appropriations, and $30 million of 31-day (prior year) expenditures. Expenditure adjustments reflect a $9.8 million transfer to the rainy day fund. (kk) The general fund balance improved by $387.4 million during fiscal 2004. The fiscal 2004 ending balance includes a required statutory balance of $35 million. (ll) The state budgets on a biennial basis. To complete the survey using annual figures, certain assumptions and estimates were required. Caution is advised when making projections using this information.

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BUDGETS

Table 7.9 FISCAL 2005 STATE GENERAL FUND, APPROPRIATED, BY REGION (In millions of dollars) State or other jurisdiction

Beginning balance

Revenues

Adjustments

Resources

Expenditures

Adjustments

Budget stabilization fund

U.S. total .............................

$18,201

$539,780

N.A.

$562,186

$562,297

N.A.

$11,728

$9,647

Eastern Region Connecticut (f) ..................... Delaware (a) ........................ Maine (n) ............................. Massachusetts (a) (p) .......... New Hampshire ................... New Jersey (a) ..................... New York (a) (w) ................. Pennsylvania (z) .................. Rhode Island (aa) ................ Vermont (gg) ........................ Regional totals .....................

0 646 15 1,479 16 822 1,077 77 44 0 4,176

13,310 2,777 2,652 23,521 1,260 27,059 42,655 22,806 2,954 950 139,944

0 0 54 0 0 0 0 0 -60 36 N.A.

13,310 3,423 2,721 25,000 1,276 27,881 43,732 22,883 2,938 986 144,150

13,226 2,846 2,710 24,351 1,326 27,478 43,039 22,876 2,938 956 141,746

0 0 0 0 0 5 -434 2 0 30 N.A.

84 578 11 649 -50 398 1,127 5 1 0 2,803

286 148 0 624 17 288 794 267 90 46 2,560

Midwestern Region Illinois (i) ............................. Indiana (j) ............................ Iowa (k) ................................ Kansas (k) ............................ Michigan (q) ........................ Minnesota (a) (r) .................. Nebraska (u) ........................ North Dakota ....................... Ohio (x) ................................ South Dakota (cc) ................ Wisconsin (a) (jj) ................. Regional totals .....................

182 291 0 327 0 924 177 77 157 0 105 2,240

23,217 11,093 4,603 4,542 8,417 13,929 2,776 942 24,862 953 11,650 106,984

2,385 286 -63 0 341 0 -84 0 0 27 0 N.A.

25,784 11,669 4,540 4,869 8,758 14,853 2,868 1,019 25,020 980 11,755 112,115

23,004 11,378 4,452 4,658 8,757 14,221 2,758 910 24,933 980 11,745 107,796

2,598 0 0 0 0 0 101 0 -33 0 0 N.A.

182 291 88 210 1 632 8 109 120 0 11 1,652

276 46 0 0 0 631 177 9 181 139 0 1,459

Southern Region Alabama (b) ......................... Arkansas ............................... Florida .................................. Georgia (a) (g) ..................... Kentucky (l) ......................... Louisiana (m) ....................... Maryland (o) ........................ Mississippi (s) ...................... Missouri (s) .......................... North Carolina (x) ............... Oklahoma (y) ....................... South Carolina (a) (bb) ....... Tennessee (dd) ..................... Texas (ee) ............................. Virginia ................................ West Virginia (ii) ................. Regional totals .....................

261 0 2,310 1,145 223 0 230 3 488 287 102 55 349 981 274 291 6,999

5,763 3,630 22,606 16,376 7,363 6,820 10,542 3,695 6,708 15,645 4,906 5,223 8,922 29,659 13,159 3,072 164,089

0 0 0 0 153 42 475 0 0 0 -12 0 -58 56 0 0 N.A.

6,025 3,630 24,916 17,521 7,738 6,861 11,247 3,698 7,197 15,933 4,997 5,277 9,213 30,696 13,433 3,362 171,744

5,924 3,630 24,049 16,376 7,587 6,861 11,159 3,698 7,171 15,916 4,764 5,073 9,116 29,460 13,402 3,320 167,506

36 0 0 0 152 0 0 0 0 0 0 55 96 508 0 32 N.A.

65 0 868 1,145 0 0 87 0 26 16 232 149 1 728 31 11 3,359

140 0 999 0 117 0 520 43 232 267 209 75 275 458 0 85 3,420

0 368 3,127 224 185 100 132 141 480 -478 0 506 4 4,789

1,927 6,877 77,251 6,259 4,220 2,085 1,335 2,505 4,622 5,304 3,692 11,652 992 128,721

361 238 0 -266 0 -22 0 58 4 0 119 102 33 N.A.

2,333 7,483 80,378 6,217 4,405 2,164 1,466 2,704 5,106 4,826 3,812 12,259 1,028 134,181

2,333 7,474 78,681 5,971 4,112 2,087 1,326 2,545 4,384 4,710 3,809 11,794 1,023 130,249

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 14 0 0 0 0 N.A.

0 8 1,697 246 292 77 140 160 708 116 3 465 5 3,917

2,059 25 0 0 0 21 0 0 0 0 67 0 35 2,207

1,662

51,470

N.A.

53,803

51,568

N.A.

2,220

2,207

Western Region Alaska (c) ............................. Arizona (d) ........................... California (a) ....................... Colorado (e) ........................ Hawaii .................................. Idaho (h) ............................... Montana (t) .......................... Nevada (v) ........................... New Mexico (a) ................... Oregon .................................. Utah (ff) ............................... Washington (hh) .................. Wyoming (kk) ...................... Regional totals ..................... Regional totals without California ............... See footnotes at end of table.

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BUDGETS

FISCAL 2005 STATE GENERAL FUND, APPROPRIATED, BY REGION – CONTINUED (In millions of dollars) Source: National Association of State Budget Officers, The Fiscal Survey of the States (December 2004). Note: For all states unless otherwise noted, transfers into budget stabilization funds are counted as expenditures and transfers from budget stabilization funds are counted as revenue. Key: N.A.—Data are not available. (a) In these states, the ending balance includes the balance in the budget stabilization fund. (b) Expenditure adjustments reflect a $36 million transfer to the Education Trust Fund Rainy Day Fund. (c) Revenue adjustments reflect a constitutional budget reserve (CBR) draw. (d) Revenue adjustments represent fund transfers, a withholding adjustment to compensate for federal withholding changes and a judicial collections program. (e) Revenue adjustments include diversions to the State Education fund and the Older Coloradoan’s Program, as well as transfers to the General Fund to mitigate revenue declines. Ending balance is projected to be $13.9 million above the statutory reserve requirement. Current law requires monies in excess of the statutory reserve to be credited to the Highway User’s Tax Fund and the Capital Construction Fund. (f) In fiscal 2005, the state projects ending the year with an ending balance of $86.7 million. This amount is included in the budget stabilization fund. (g) The Federal Flexible Assistance grants provide an additional $278.4 million for expenditure. (h) Revenue adjustments include $21.5 million in transfers to other funds. The largest of these transfers is $21million to the Budget Stabilization Fund. (i) Revenue adjustments include $2,385 million on transfers into general funds. Expenditure adjustments include $495 million to repay pension obligation bond debt service, and transfers-out of $2,103 million. (j) Revenue adjustments reflect one-time transfers from dedicated funds and the Rainy Day Fund. (k) Revenue adjustments reflect a reduction of $63.4 million to restore the phase-out of the sales tax on residential utilities which was eliminated inadvertently through an unrelated item veto during the 2003 legislative session. (l) Kentucky is operating in fiscal year 2004-2005 without an enacted executive branch appropriations bill. The Governor has issued an Executive Order to establish a quarterly Public Services Continuation Plan, and the Executive branch is operating under it the General Assembly enacted appropriations bills for the judicial and legislative branches. Revenue includes $108.8 million in Tobacco Settlement funds. Revenue adjustments include $85.1 million that represents appropriation balances carried over from the prior fiscal year, and $67.6 million from fund transfers into the General Fund. expenditure adjustments represent appropriation balances forwarded to the next fiscal year. (m) Revenue adjustments include $17.3 million in non-recurring revenue from the fiscal 2003 surplus, the use of $2.7 million of fund balances and 421.7 million carried-forward. (n) Revenue adjustments reflect $54 million in legislative and statutorily authorized transfers, which include repayment of a $-10 million Retiree Health Insurance Fund General Fund loan and a $39.6 million transfer from the Retiree Health Insurance Fund to the General fund by converting back to payas-you-go basis. $11.4 million from the Highway fund unallocated surplus, $3 million transferred from the Highway Fund. $3.5 million from lapsed funds, $3.3 million from hospital rate adjustments and various adjustments netting to $3.2 million. (o) Revenue adjustments reflect transfers from other funds, including $91 million from the Rainy Day Fund. Expenditures include appropriations to the Rainy Day Fund of $103.7 million. (p) The fiscal 2005 revenue figure is based on a tax estimate agreed upon by the executive Office for Administration and Finance and the Legislature on January 14, 2004. this figure has not been adjusted to reflect actual tax collections exceeding benchmarks set in January. (q) Fiscal 2005 revenue adjustments include anticipated federal and state law changes $-560.9 million); driver’s license fees and fines ($98.1 million); casino tax increase ($42.9 million); increased tax audits (485.1 million); escheats law change ($15 million); deposits from state restricted funds ($7 million); suspension of county revenue sharing payments ($182.3 million); a revenue sharing freeze ($339.4 million); other revenue adjustments ($-11.7 million); a freeze on interfund borrowing rates ($20 million); and several pending actions including the sale of properties ($83.4 million); Repeal of the pharmaceutical tax credit ($10 million); tax law changes ($15 million); and deposits of restricted revenue sources to the general fund ($15.5 million). (r) The ending balance includes budget reserve of $631.4 million. (s) Revenues are net of refunds. Estimated refunds for Fiscal 2005 totaled $1,219.6 million. Revenues include $214.6 million transferred to the General

Revenue Fund. (t) Total appropriated expenditures include 46 million of anticipated supplemental appropriations. (u) Revenue adjustments are transfers between the General Fund and other funds. Per Nebraska law, this includes a transfer to the Cash Reserve Fund (Rainy Day Fund) of the amount the prior year’s net general Fund receipts exceeded the official forecast. expenditure adjustments are carryover appropriations from the prior fiscal year and a small amount reserved for supplemental/deficit appropriations. (v) The fiscal 2004 ending balance and fiscal 2005 beginning balance differ due to rounding. Fiscal 2005 figures reflect legislatively approved amounts. (w) The ending balance includes $794 million in the tax stabilization reserve fund (rainy day fund) and $312 million in the Community Projects Fund and $21 million in reserve funds for litigation risks. (x) Federal reimbursements for Medicaid and other human services programs are included in the general revenue fund. Beginning balances are undesignated fund balances. The actual cash balances would be higher by the amount reserved for encumbrances and designated transfers from the general revenue fund. Expenditures for fiscal 2005 do not include encumbrances outstanding at the end of the year. Ohio reports expenditures based on disbursements for the general revenue fund. Expenditure adjustments reflect projected miscellaneous transfers-out of $17.6 million. These transfers-out are adjusted for an anticipated net change in encumbrances from fiscal 2004 levels of $-50.6 million. Ohio budgets on a biennial basis. The fiscal year 2005 budget was enacted in July 2003. The order reductions for 2005. (y) Revenue adjustments reflect an increase to the General Revenue Fund cash-flow reserve of $12 million. (z) Expenditure adjustments reflect a transfer of 25 percent of the ending balance to the budget stabilization (rainy day) fund. (aa) Revenue adjustments reflect a contribution to budget stabilization fund. (bb) Expenditure adjustments reflect agencies’ carryforward dollars. (cc) Revenue adjustments reflect $7.6 million from one-time receipts and $19.4 million transferred from the Property Tax Reduction Fund to cover the anticipated budget shortfall. (dd) Tennessee’s ending balance is committed to fund one-time appropriations in the next fiscal year. It is not an uncommitted balance. Revenue adjustments reflect a $-58.4 million transfer to the rainy day fund. Expenditure adjustments reflect a $21.6 million transfer to the Transportation Equity Fund, a $58.6 million transfer to the capital outlay projects fund, and $16.2 million for dedicated appropriations. (ee) Revenue information is from the Comptroller’s December 2003 certification revenue estimate, updated to reflect the Comptroller’s April 2004 revised revenue estimate. Revenue adjustments reflect dedicated account balances. Total expenditures are 2005 appropriatedas reported by the Legislative Budget Board. Total expenditures include $258 million in appropriations from the Rainy Day Fund. Expenditure adjustments include $104 million held in reserve for transfer to the Rainy day Fund and other adjustments to reconcile the actual ending balance reported by the Comptroller. (ff) Revenue adjustments include a $107.2 million reserve from the prior fiscal year, $7 million of increased accounts receivable collections, and $5.1 million of transfers from various restricted accounts. The beginning balance does not match the fiscal 2004 ending balance due to a surplus in fiscal 2004. (gg) Revenue adjustments reflect a $12.5 million in direct applications and transfers in. $7.9 million increase in property transfer tax revenue estimate, and $15.6 million from general fund surplus reserve. Expenditure adjustments include $1.1 million to the budget stabilization reserve and $28.6 million to the general fund surplus reserve. (hh) Revenue adjustments represent transfers from other accounts to the General Fund. (ii) The beginning balance reflects $203.3 million of reappropriations, $21.2 million of surplus appropriations, and a $66 million unappropriated surplus balance. Expenditures reflect $3,071.8 million of regular appropriations, $203.3 million of reappropriations, $21.2 million of surplus appropriations, and $23.8 million of 31-day (prior year) expenditures. Expenditures adjustments reflect a $31.7 million transfer to the rainy day fund. (jj) Although the fiscal 2004 balance increase was substantial, it was less than anticipated by final legislative action. Consequently this minor shortfall in fiscal 2004 lowers the expected fiscal 2005 ending balance below a required statutory balance for fiscal 2005 of $40 million. Because the projected fiscal 2005 ending balance remains positive, however, it is not deemed a budget gap requiring correction prior to the next biennial budget. (kk) The state budgets on a biennial basis. To complete the survey using annual figures, certain assumptions ans estimates were required. Caution is advised when making projections using this information.

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… … ★ ★ … ★ … … … ★ … ★ … ★ ★ ★(h) ★ … … … … ★ ★ … ★ … … … … …

… (a) ★ ★ ★ ★ … ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ … ★ ★ … ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

State

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

See footnotes at end of table.

… … ★ … ★

CDs within state

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

CDs nationally

7-10

Other time deposits … … ★ … …

… ★ … … …

… ★ … ★ …

… ★ … … ★

★ … … … ★

… … ★ ★ …

… … ★ ★ ★

Bankers’ acceptances … ★ ★ … ★

… ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

… ★ … ★ ★

★ ★ … … ★

★ … ★ ★ ★

… … ★ ★ ★

Commercial paper ★ ★ ★ … ★

… ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ …

★ ★ ★ … ★

★ … ★ ★ ★

… … ★ ★ ★

Corporate notes/bonds ★ … ★ … ★

… ★ ★ ★ ★

… ★ ★ ★ …

… ★ ★ ★ …

… ★ … … ★

★ … ★ ★ ★

… … ★ ★ ★

Corporate stocks (foreign) … … … … …

… ★ … … ★

… … … ★ …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … ★ … …

Corporate stocks (domestic) … … … … …

… ★ … ★ ★

… … … ★ …

… … ★ ★ …

… … … … …

★ … … … …

… … ★ … …

Derivatives … … … … …

… ★ … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… ★ … … …

… … … ★ …

… … … … …

Equities

… … ★ … …

… ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ … ★ ★ … … … … …

… … … ★ …

… … ★ … …

… ★ … … …

★ … … ★ ★

… … ★ ★ ★

Mortgage backed securities

… … … ★ …

… … ★ ★ …

… … … … …

★ … … … …

… … ★ … …

Mutuals … … … … ★

… ★ … … …

… ★ … ★ …

… ★ ★ … ★

… … … … ★

★ … … ★ …

… … ★ … …

State/local government obligations … ★ ★ … ★

… ★ … ★ ★

★ ★ … ★ …

… ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ … … ★

★ … … ★ ★

… … ★ ★ ★

U.S. Treasury obligations ★ ★ ★ … ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ … ★ ★ ★

… … ★ ★ ★

U.S. agency obligations ★ ★ ★ … …

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ … ★ ★ ★

… … ★ ★ ★

Eurodollars–CDs or TDs … … … … …

… ★ … … …

… ★ … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … ★ … …

… … … … …

Real Estate … … … … …

… ★ … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

★ ★ ★ … ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

★ … ★ ★ ★ ★ … ★ ★ ★

… … … … …

Repurchase agreements

458 Venture capital

Table 7.10 ALLOWABLE STATE INVESTMENTS

Other (m) … … … …

… … (k) (l) …

(i) (j) … … …

… (g) … … …

(d) (e) (f) (f) …

(b) … … (c) …

… … … … …

BUDGETS


459

★ … ★ ★ … ★ … … ★ … ★ … ★ … ★

CDs within state ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ … ★ … ★ ★ ★ … ★

State

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming ............................. … … ★ … ★

★ … ★ … …

★ … ★ … …

★ ★ ★ … ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ … …

Commercial paper ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Corporate notes/bonds ★ … ★ ★ ★

★ … ★ ★ …

… ★ … ★ ★

Corporate stocks (foreign) … … ★ ★ …

★ … ★ (q) …

… … … ★ …

… … ★ ★ ★

★ … ★ (q) …

… … … ★ …

Corporate stocks (domestic)

Source: National Association of State Treasurers, January 2005. Key: ★—Yes . . .—No (a) Nothing is restricted by Statute. Commission is subject to prudent investor rule. The Commissioner evaluated each fund’s time horizon and risk. (b) Asset back securities. (c) Convertible corporate bonds. (d) Student loans. (e) Money market funds, SBAs. (f) Money market mutual funds. (g) Collateralized mortgage obligations, other mortgages, asset backed.

CDs nationally

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Other time deposits

7-10

Bankers’ acceptances

ALLOWABLE STATE INVESTMENTS—Continued

Derivatives … … … … ★

… … ★ … …

(n) … … … …

Equities

Mortgage backed securities ★ ★ ★ … ★

★ … ★ … …

… ★ ★ … ★

Mutuals ★ … ★ … …

★ … ★ ★ ★

(o) … … … …

State/local government obligations ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ … ★ ★ ★

★ ★ … … ★

U.S. Treasury obligations ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

U.S. agency obligations ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Eurodollars–CDs or TDs … … ★ … …

… … … … …

… … … … …

Real Estate … … ★ ★ …

★ … … … …

… … … ★ …

Repurchase agreements ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

… … … ★ …

… … … … …

… … … ★ …

Venture capital

Other … … … (s) …

… … … … (r)

… (p) … … …

(h) Authorized to do business in Massachusetts. (i) Massachusetts Municipal Depository Trust per statute. (j) Emergency loans to municipalities within the state. (k) Collateralized mortgage obligations. (l) Does not include retirement mutual funds. (m) All fixed income. (n) Derivatives are permitted if they otherwise meet statutory definition of permissible investment. (o) Money market mutual funds only. (p) Certain trust funds can invest in equities. (q) Trust funds only. (r) Collateralized CDs. (s) Private equity, emerging market securities, real estate mortgages and leverage buyout funds.

… … ★ ★ ★

★ … ★ (o) …

… … … … …

BUDGETS

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... SE SE SE SE SE SE (a) SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE ... SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE ... SE SE

State

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

See footnotes at end of table.

Reviewing agency

(d) ... ... ... Quarterly

Monthly Ongoing Ongoing Quarterly Quarterly

Quarterly (d) 3 years ... Quarterly

Ongoing 2 years Annually 3 years Annually

(b) Quarterly (d) Annually 4 years

Ongoing Quarterly 5–7 years (b) Annually

... Annually Quarterly Quarterly Annually

Frequency of review

Banking relations

SE, OF SE ... SE SE

SE SE SE SE OF

SE SE SE, OF ... SE

N.A. SE SE SE, OF SE

SE SE SE SE SE

OF OF (a) SE (c) SE

SE SE SE SE SE

Reviewing agency

Monthly ... ... ... Quarterly

Monthly, Annually Ongoing Quarterly Quarterly Annually

Quarterly (d) ... ... Monthly

N.A. Quarterly, Annually (e) Annually Semi-Annually Annually

(d) Daily Quarterly Annually Annually

Ongoing Weekly Annually Annually Quarterly

Annually N.A. Quarterly Quarterly Monthly

Frequency of review

Investment practices

Reviews of cash management programs

Table 7.11 CASH MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS AND SERVICES

B B B NU I, B

NU B B B B

B B B B I, B

B NU B NU B

B B B B B

B B B I, B B

B B B NU B

Lock boxes

I, B I I B I, B

I, B B I I I

B I, B I NU I, B

I B (f) B I, B I

I I, B I, B I, B I

B I, B I, B NU I

B I I, B B I, B

Wire transfers

B B B NU NU

NU I, B B I B

B B I NU B

I B B B B

B B B I, B B

B B B B NU

B B B B I, B

Zero balance accounts

I I NU NU NU

I I, B I, B I I

B NU I NU I, B

NU I B I, B I, B

NU I, B I, B NU I

B I, B I, B NU NU

I I I I, B I

I, B I, B NU NU NU

NU I I, B I I, B

B I, B I NU I, B

I I B I, B I, B

I I NU I I

B I, B I B NU

I I I I, B I, B

Information Account services reconciliation systems

Agency preparing cash management services

B B NU B NU

I, B B B B I

B B I B I, B

I, B B B B I, B

B B I, B I, B I

B I, B I, B B NU

B B I, B B B

Automated clearinghouse

BUDGETS


461

SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE SE

State

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

SE SE, OF SE, OF SE SE SE SE SE SE SE OF SE N.A. SE SE, OF

Ongoing Ongoing As needed Quarterly Annually Annually Annually Annually Annually 2 years Annually Semi-Annually Quarterly 6 years Daily Annually Annually N.A. N.A. Quarterly

Annually Annually Annually Quarterly Ongoing

Ongoing Ongoing Daily, Monthly Quarterly Annually

Frequency of review

Investment practices Reviewing agency

Frequency of review

Source: National Association of State Treasurers, January 2005. Key: SE—State employee N.A.—Not applicable OF—Outside firm B—Performed by bank I—Within treasurer’s office

Reviewing agency

Banking relations

`

7-11

Reviews of cash management programs

CASH MANAGEMENT PROGRAMS AND SERVICES—Continued

B B I B NU

I I I, B B B

B I, B B B B

Lock boxes

B B NU B I

B B B B B

B I, B B I, B I

Zero balance accounts

B I I I, B NU

NU I I I I, B

I I NU I, B NU

I, B I I, B I, B I

I I I NU I

NU I, B I, B I, B I

Information Account services reconciliation systems

Agency preparing cash management services

NU—Not utilized (a) Cash Management Policy Board reviews and implements. (b) Outside firm utilized occasionally. (c) Reviewed when contract expires. (d) No set period for review. (e) Quarterly review by Investment Commission, annual review by State Auditor. (f) Initiated in-house by electronic link to bank.

I B NU B I, B

B I, B I I, B B

NU I B I, B I, B

Wire transfers

I, B I, B I B I

B B I, B I I, B

I, B I B I, B B

Automated clearinghouse

BUDGETS

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... ★ ... ... ... ★ ... ★ ... ... ★ ... ... ... ★ ... ★ ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ... ★ ... (k) ...

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

See footnotes at end of table.

... ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

... ... ... (k) ...

... ... ... ... ...

Application

... ★ ★ ... ...

Competitive bid

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State

Table 7.12 DEMAND DEPOSITS

... ... ... (k) ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ... ★ ...

Negotiation

... ★ ... (k) ...

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ★ ...

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ★ ★ ... ...

Depositor’s convenience

... ... ... (k) ...

... ★ ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ★ ...

Compensating balances

Method for selecting depository

... ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ (k) ★

★ ★ ... (k) ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ★ ... ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ... ★ ★ ... ... ★

Treasurer’s approval

Agency’s convenience

Treasurer Treasurer (l) Treasurer State Constitution Treasurer, Board (n)

Treasurer Treasurer Treasurer, Board ... Treasurer

SF SF (m) SF CMB, SF

SF CMB CMB, SF (k) CMB, SF

CMB, SF CMB CMB, SF CMB, SF CMB

SF CMB, SF (e) SF CMB (g)

SF CMB, SF SF CMB CMB, SF

CMB, SF, MB CMB, SF, MB CMB, SF SF SF

CMB CMB CMB CMB, SF CMB

Compensation of demand depositories

Treasurer Treasurer Comm. of Finance Treasurer, Finance Dept. Board (j)

Treasurer, Board (d) Treasurer Treasurer Treasurer

Treasurer Treasurer Treasurer Treasurer Treasurer

Treasurer, Controller Treasurer Treasurer, Board Treasurer Individual agencies

Individual agencies Cash manager Treasurer Treasurer Treasurer

Selection of depository made by

Yes Yes Yes No ...

Yes Yes Yes No Yes

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

Yes No Yes No No

Yes Yes No (b) Yes Yes

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

Collateral above federal level

100 102 100 ... 100

50 110 102 ... 100

(i) 25 110 105 100

100 100 100 10 (f) 100 (h)

100 ... 100 0 ...

102 (a) 102 (c) 100 ...

100 105 102 105 110

Percentage requiring collateral

BUDGETS


7-12

463

... ★ ★ ... ...

★ ... ★ ... ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming ............................. ... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ★ ...

Negotiation

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ... ... ★

★ ... ... ★ ★ ... ... ... ★ ★

Compensating balances

Depositor’s convenience

Method for selecting depository

Source: National Association of State Treasurers, January 2005. Key: ★—Method utilized. . . .—Method not utilized. N.A.—Not available. CMB—Compensating balances. SF—Service fee. MB—Minimum balance. (a) Varies based upon bank’s risk based capitol ratios. (b) No requirements if a bank meets credit criteria. (c) If a bank does not meet credit criteria. (d) Treasurer, Finance Secretary and a selection committee are responsible for the selection of institutions. (e) CMB for Imprest and receipt accounts, SF for primary depository. (f) Demand deposits that exceed 25 percent of a bank’s retained earnings must be collateralized.

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

Application

... ... ... ... ...

State

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Competitive bid

DEMAND DEPOSITS—Continued

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

Treasurer’s approval

(q) Treasurer Treasurer Treasurer, Board Treasurer

Treasurer Treasurer Treasurer Treasurer (p)

Treasurer Treasurer Board (n) Treasurer Treasurer

Selection of depository made by

CMB, SF CMB, SF CMB CMB CMB, SF

CMB, SF, MB SF CMB, SF SF SF, MB

CMB, SF CMB, SF CMB SF CMB

Compensation of demand depositories

Yes Yes Yes No Yes

Yes Yes Yes No Yes

Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes

Collateral above federal level

50-100 (r) 10 65 N.A. 102

100 105 105 ... 100

110 25 100 100 100 (o)

Percentage requiring collateral

(g) Combination of fees, CMB. (h) Any public funds in excess of FDIC must be collateralized. (i) No deposits meet collateral requirements. A contractual $100 million collateral exists with the central depository bank but is not required by law. (j) Must be approved by State Treasurer, State Auditor, Governor. (k) Determined by Treasurer. (l) RFP issued, Treasury employee committee reviews. (m) Transaction fee. (n) Treasurer is chair of Board. (o) 100 percent collateralization over $300,000. (p) State Treasurer, State Auditor, & Governor are responsible. (q) Cash and banking services manager. (r) Banks are required to secure all deposits in excess of FDIC insurance by 50 percent. Savings and Loans required to secure all deposits by 100 percent.

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ★

... ... ... ★ ★

Agency’s convenience

BUDGETS

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DEMOGRAPHICS

The Population 65 Years and Older: Aging in America By Karen Humes The growth of the 65-and-older population in the United States impacts many facets of our society, challenging policy-makers to meet the needs of aging Americans. There are many basic characteristics of the 65-and-older population that are important components for understanding how to best meet their needs. This article describes the growth of this segment of the U.S. population, as well as discusses its geographic distribution and selected characteristics. The growth of the older population, defined here as those 65 and older, greatly influences many aspects of our society, challenging national and state policy-makers, among others, to meet the needs of aging Americans.1 The demographic, social, health and economic characteristics of the 65-and-older population are important components for understanding how to best meet their needs. This article will describe the past and projected growth of this segment of the U.S. population, as well as discuss its geographic distribution and selected characteristics.

Growth of the Older Population in the United States Throughout the 20th century, the older population has increased dramatically (Figure A). Decennial census data show that the older population grew tenfold between 1900 and 2000, increasing from 3.1 million to 35 million, respectively. To put this increase in perspective, the U.S. population under age 65 grew threefold between 1900 and 2000 (rising from 76 million to 281.4 million). The older population also increased its proportion of the total U.S. population, growing from 4.1 percent in 1900 to 12.4 percent in 2000. The oldest-old population, those 85 and older, grew over thirty fold, from 122,000 in 1900 (representing 0.2 percent of the total U.S. population) to 4.2 million in 2000 (representing 1.5 percent of the total U.S. population). The increase in the proportion of older people reflects sustained low fertility levels and relatively larger declines in mortality at older ages, especially in the latter third of the 20th century.2 The U.S. began the 20th century experiencing relatively high levels of fertility and mortality, which resulted in a young population with a median age of 22.9 years in 1900.3 In general, as fertility and mortality rates declined, the U.S. population aged, evident in a median age of 35.3 years in 2000. Beyond 2000, the older population is projected to increase dramatically, particularly between 2010 and 464

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2030. By 2030, the older population is expected to be twice as large as it was in 2000, growing from 35 million to 71.5 million, while the total U.S. population growth is projected to be slower (281.4 million in 2000 to 363.8 million in 2030). In 2030, the older population is projected to account for 19.6 percent (about 1 in 5) of the population. The dramatic growth of the older population between 2010 and 2030 represents the effect of the “baby boom” generation. The baby boomers are the post-World War II generation born from 1946 to 1964, which will begin turning age 65 in 2011, creating a sharp rise in the older population. The magnitude of the baby boomers is reflected in the fact that 70 percent more people were born from 1946 to 1964 than during the preceding two decades.4 After 2030, the growth of the older population is expected to slow. At that time, the proportion of older people is projected to become fairly stable, even though the absolute number of older people is projected to continue to grow. The oldest-old population, however, is projected to increase rapidly after 2030, when the baby boomers start to move into this age group.5

Geographic Distribution of the Older Population in the United States Figure B shows the proportion of older people in each state’s population, as well as several prevalent patterns in 2003.6 High proportions of older people are located in a band of states stretching from Montana and North Dakota southward to Oklahoma and Arkansas. Another band of high proportions of older people stretches from Maine and Rhode Island (except New Hampshire) southward to Tennessee and Alabama. Additionally, many of the states in the West have lower proportions of older people.7 Age patterns are affected by a state’s fertility and mortality levels, as well as by the migration of younger and older people to and from the state.8 Overall, 32 states had a proportion of older people

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Figure A: U.S. Population 65 Years and Over, By Age Group: Census Counts, 1900–2000, and Projections, 2010–2050 100 90 80

Millions

70 60 50 40

65 and over

30 20 10

85 and over

0 1900

1910

1920

1930

1940

1950

1960

1970

Note: These data are for the resident population. Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Decennial Census and Projections

that equaled or exceeded the national proportion of 12 percent. Florida had the highest proportion of older people (16.7 percent), followed by West Virginia and Pennsylvania (14.9 percent and 14.8 percent, respectively). Alaska had the lowest proportion of older people (6.3 percent). Numerically, California had the largest older population (3.6 million). Florida and New York ranked second and third with 2.8 million and 2.3 million, respectively. Alaska had the smallest older population (39,600).

Demographic Composition The sex ratio (the number of males per 100 females) is a basic indicator of sex composition. For the total U.S. population, there were 95.8 males for every 100 females in 2003. For the older population, there were 73.7 men for every 100 women. The lower sex ratio for the older population is generally driven by the fact that average life expectancy is greater for females than for males. At the state level, 28 states had older-population sex ratios that equaled or exceeded the national sex ratio of 73.7. Of the 10 states with the highest olderpopulation sex ratios in 2003, eight are in the West (Alaska, 97.8; Nevada, 87.2; Idaho, 84.1; Wyoming,

1980

1990

2000

2010

2020

2030

2040

2050

Projected

82.8; Montana, 82.6; Arizona, 82.5; Utah, 82.3; and New Mexico, 80.9), one is in the South (Florida, 79.1), and one is in the Northeast (New Hampshire, 78.8). The District of Columbia had the lowest olderpopulation sex ratio (60.7).9 Policy-makers in government and private-sector organizations face the challenge of planning for the needs of a fast-growing, older population where women outnumber men. In 2003, the proportion of the older population that was minority was lower than the total U.S. proportion minority (18.0 percent compared with 32.2 percent).10 Sixteen states had proportions of older people that were minority that equaled or exceeded the national proportion of 18 percent. Of the 10 states with the highest proportions minority among the older population, most are in the West (Hawaii, 78.1 percent; New Mexico, 39 percent; California, 33.1 percent; and Alaska, 27.5 percent) or South (the District of Columbia, 74.3 percent; Texas, 31.6 percent; Mississippi, 26.6 percent; Louisiana, 26.4 percent; and Maryland, 24.5 percent), and one is in the Northeast (New York, 23.8 percent). Maine had the lowest proportion minority among its older population (1.2 percent). As the older population grows larger in the coming decades, it is projected that the proportion minority will increase, particularly the proportion The Council of State Governments

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DEMOGRAPHICS Hispanic. Greater flexibility may be required in future programs and services to meet the needs of a more diverse older population.11

Social Characteristics In 2003, being widowed was much more common among the older population than among the population 15 and older (31.1 percent compared with 6.2 percent). This was particularly true for older women, as they were three times as likely as older men to be widowed. 12 In 25 states, the proportions of older people who were widowed equaled or exceeded the national proportion of 31.1 percent. Rhode Island had the highest proportion (36.4 percent). The states ranking second through 10th are located in the South (Mississippi, 35.8 percent; Louisiana, 34.2 percent; Alabama, 34.1 percent; Kentucky and the District of Columbia, each with 33.6 percent; North Carolina, 33.5 percent; and Arkansas, 33.2 percent) and in the Northeast (Pennsylvania, 35 percent, and Massachusetts, 33.2 percent). Alaska had the lowest proportion of older people who were widowed (24.9 percent). The older population was about three times as likely as the total U.S. population to live alone (29.8 percent compared with 10.3 percent) in 2003. Thirtythree states had proportions of older people who lived alone that equaled or exceeded the national proportion of 29.8 percent. All the U.S. regions were represented among the 10 states with the highest proportions of older people who lived alone (the District of Columbia, 42.9 percent; Nebraska, 35.3 percent; Rhode Island 34.7 percent; North Dakota, 34.6 percent; Montana, 33.1 percent; South Dakota and Massachusetts, each with 33 percent; Maine, 32.9 percent; Pennsylvania 32.8 percent; and Oklahoma, 32.7 percent). Among the states, Hawaii had the lowest proportion of older people who lived alone (21.9 percent). Being widowed and/or living alone are important indicators of the well-being of the older population because they are typically linked to income, health status and the availability of caregivers. For example, older people who lived alone were more likely than older people who lived with their spouses to be in poverty.13 Thus, in the present and the future, these indicators can provide additional information for efforts to assess potential physical and social needs of the older population. In 2003, a lower proportion of the older population (70.7 percent) than of the population 25 and older (83.6 percent) were high school graduates or had more education. In 29 states, the proportions of older people with a high school diploma or more educa466

00G-Humes

tion equaled or exceeded the national proportion of 70.7 percent. Eight of the 10 states with the highest proportions of older people with a high school diploma or more education are located in the West (Utah, 84 percent; Wyoming, 82 percent; Washington, 82 percent; Montana, 80.5 percent; Colorado, 80.3 percent; Idaho, 79.9 percent; Oregon, 78.9 percent; and Nevada, 78.7 percent), and two are in the Midwest (Nebraska, 80.3 percent, and Iowa, 78.5 percent). The lowest proportion of older people with a high school diploma or more education was in Kentucky (55.8 percent). Educational attainment is another important indicator of the well-being of the older population. In general, higher levels of education are associated with higher incomes, higher standards of living, and above-average health.14 Thus, educational attainment is a factor that policy-makers can monitor when planning specialized services and programs for the growing older population.

Disability In 2003, the proportion of the older population reporting a disability (one or more) was 39.9 percent, compared with 14.3 percent of the population 5 and older.15 Twenty-three states had proportions of older people who reported a disability that equaled or exceeded the national proportion of 39.9 percent. Eight of the 10 states with the highest proportions of older people who reported a disability are located in the South (Mississippi, 54.2 percent; Arkansas, 50.5 percent; West Virginia, 49.9 percent; Kentucky, 47.7 percent; Alabama, 47 percent; Louisiana, 46.7 percent; Georgia, 45.6 percent; and Tennessee, 44.6 percent), and two are in the West (New Mexico, 45.8 percent, and Alaska, 45.3 percent). Hawaii had the lowest proportion of older people who reported a disability (34.4 percent).

Income and Poverty In 2003, the median income for all households was $43,564.16 Households with an older householder had a much lower median income ($26,736), in part reflecting the fact that the vast majority of the older population was retired from full-time work. Nineteen states had median incomes for households with an older householder that equaled or exceeded the national level of $26,736. The 10 states with the highest median incomes for households with an older householder represent all U.S. regions except the Midwest (Hawaii, $39,378; Alaska, $37,540; Maryland, $33,203; Delaware, $32,850; Utah, $32,754; Connecticut, $32,306; New Jersey, $31,931; Washington, $31,882; Virginia, $31,863; and California,

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Figure B: Percent of State Population 65 Years and Over: 2003

Note: These data are for the household population. Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2003 American Community Survey.

$31,705). Among the states, Mississippi had the lowest median income for households with an older householder ($20,973). The older population was less likely than the total U.S. population to be in poverty in 2003 (9.8 percent compared with 12.7 percent). Nineteen states had proportions of older people in poverty that equaled or exceeded the national proportion of 9.8 percent. Nine of the 10 states with the highest proportions of older people in poverty are located in the South (Mississippi, 16.4 percent; Louisiana, 14.8 percent; the District of Columbia, 14.4 percent; Kentucky, 14.2 percent; Alabama, 13.7 percent; Georgia, 13.3 percent; Texas, 13 percent; and Arkansas and North Carolina, each with 12.9 percent) and one is in the West (New Mexico, 13.1 percent). The lowest proportion of older people in poverty was in Alaska (4.8 percent). The proportion of older people in poverty and the median income of households with an older householder

provide some insight into the economic situation of older Americans. Policy-makers can use these indicators when assessing the segments of the older population at the greatest risk of having inadequate basic needs such as food and housing.

Conclusion The size of the older population will increase dramatically in the coming decades, far faster than the rest of the U.S. population. Policy-makers need current and relevant data to aid them in addressing the needs of this rapidly growing older population. These needs often reflect characteristics of the older population, including being predominantly female, commonly living alone, and typically reporting a disability.

Author’s Note This article is released to inform interested parties of ongoing research and to encourage discussion of work in progress. The views expressed on technical The Council of State Governments

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DEMOGRAPHICS issues are those of the author and not necessarily those of the U.S. Census Bureau.

Notes 1 In this article, the older population (or older people or older householders) is defined as people 65 years and over. Except where noted, age classification is based on the age of the person in complete years at the time of interview for the American Community Survey in 2003. Both age and date of birth are used in combination to calculate the most accurate age at the time of interview. 2 Frank Hobbs and Nicole Stoops, U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000 Special Reports, Series CENSR-4, Demographic Trends in the 20th Century, Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2002). 3 U.S. Census Bureau, decennial census of population, 1900 and 2000. Median age splits the population into halves. One half of the population is older than the median age and the other half is younger. 4 Frank Hobbs and Bonnie Damon, U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Reports, Special Studies, P23-190, 65+ in the United States, (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1996). 5 Federal Interagency Forum on Aging-Related Statistics, Older Americans 2004: Key Indicators of Well-Being, (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2004). 6 The data presented in the remainder of this paper are from the 2003 American Community Survey. The universe for this survey is the household population. Those in group quarters (e.g. nursing facilities, etc.) are not included in the universe. 7 The West includes Alaska, Arizona, California, Colorado, Hawaii, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, New Mexico, Oregon, Utah, Washington and Wyoming. The South includes Alabama, Arkansas, Delaware, Washington, the District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, North Carolina, Oklahoma, South Carolina, Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia. The Midwest includes Illinois, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Ohio, South Dakota and Wisconsin. The Northeast includes Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Vermont. 8 For Census 2000 information about the older populations of counties, places, and cities, see Lisa Hetzel and Annetta Smith, 2001, The 65 Years and Over Population: 2000, Washington, DC, Census 2000 Brief, C2KBR/01-

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10, U.S. Census Bureau. This report is available on the U.S. Census Bureau’s Internet site at www.census.gov/prod/ 2001pubs/C2KBR01-10.pdf. 9 The District of Columbia is treated as a state equivalent in this paper. 10 The category “minority” includes people who identified themselves as Black, Asian, American Indian or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, Some other race, Two or more races, or Hispanic (who may be any race). People who identified themselves as non-Hispanic White only are not included in the minority population. 11 Federal Interagency Forum on Aging-Related Statistics, Older Americans 2004: Key Indicators of Well-Being, (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2004). 12 Yvonne J. Gist and Lisa I. Hetzel, 2004, We the People: Aging in the United States, Washington, DC, Census 2000 Special Report, CENSR-19, U.S. Census Bureau. 13 Federal Interagency Forum on Aging-Related Statistics, Older Americans 2004: Key Indicators of Well-Being, (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2004). 14 Federal Interagency Forum on Aging-Related Statistics, Older Americans 2004: Key Indicators of Well-Being, (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 2004). 15 People aged 65 and over were classified as having a disability if they reported one or more of the following disabilities: 1) sensory disability; 2) physical disability; 3) mental disability; 4) self-care disability; 5) go-outside-home disability. 16 Median household income in the last 12 months (2003 inflation-adjusted dollars) for households with a householder 65 years and over. Poverty status was determined for everyone except those in institutions, military group quarters, and college dormitories, and unrelated individuals under 15 years old. These groups were excluded from the denominator when calculating poverty rates.

About the Author Karen Humes is a statistician with the U.S. Census Bureau. She received a B.A. in sociology from Eastern Michigan University and an M.A. degree in sociology from Western Michigan University. She began her career at the U.S. Census Bureau in 1998 in the Population Division where she focused on racial and ethnic group statistics. She currently manages the development and analysis of statistics related to age and gender.

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562,766 39,600 694,372 359,150 3,583,268 420,597 432,715 102,472 2,782,086 774,936 163,517 147,584 1,411,495 713,375 397,122 324,146 483,599 492,713 176,627 594,609 797,623 1,177,082 563,090 328,868 703,473 117,058 213,121 245,844 143,022 1,060,288 219,718 2,343,263 953,129 85,646 1,425,707

Colorado ......................................... Connecticut ..................................... Delaware ......................................... Florida ............................................. Georgia ............................................

Hawaii ............................................. Idaho ................................................ Illinois .............................................. Indiana ............................................ Iowa .................................................

Kansas ............................................. Kentucky ......................................... Louisiana ........................................ Maine ............................................... Maryland ........................................

Massachusetts ................................ Michigan ......................................... Minnesota ....................................... Mississippi ...................................... Missouri ..........................................

Montana .......................................... Nebraska ......................................... Nevada ............................................. New Hampshire .............................. New Jersey ......................................

New Mexico .................................... New York ......................................... North Carolina ............................... North Dakota ................................. Ohio .................................................

See footnotes at end of table

33,896,172

Alabama .......................................... Alaska .............................................. Arizona ............................................ Arkansas ......................................... California ........................................

12.0 12.6 11.7 14.1 12.8

13.1 12.6 11.1 11.4 12.6

12.8 12.0 11.4 11.8 12.7

12.3 12.1 11.3 13.9 11.1

13.4 11.1 11.4 11.9 14.0

9.5 12.8 12.9 16.7 9.2

12.8 6.3 12.7 13.6 10.3

12.0

282,909,885 100.0

% of pop.

Total U.S. Population (all ages) ...

Number

65 Years and Over United States ..................................

State of jurisdiction

Population

80.9 69.4 70.9 76.3 71.7

82.6 74.9 87.2 78.8 70.0

69.5 73.1 75.6 69.5 73.8

73.4 72.0 69.9 75.5 71.5

78.6 84.1 70.8 71.6 73.7

78.0 71.3 78.2 79.1 70.6

69.5 97.8 82.5 76.6 75.2

73.7

95.8

Sex ratio (a)

85,585 558,602 170,573 1,698 149,210

4,851 8,357 43,260 2,445 199,174

62,351 155,342 20,906 87,454 63,875

22,704 31,849 129,875 2,117 145,684

127,701 5,345 251,927 58,694 8,729

62,126 37,339 15,239 529,688 166,697

114,768 10,904 105,840 45,433 1,184,456

6,097,304

91,141,238

Number

39.0 23.8 17.9 2.0 10.5

4.1 3.9 17.6 1.7 18.8

7.8 13.2 3.7 26.6 9.1

7.0 6.6 26.4 1.2 24.5

78.1 3.6 17.8 8.2 2.2

14.8 8.6 14.9 19.0 21.5

20.4 27.5 15.2 12.7 33.1

18.0

32.2

% of pop.

Minority (b)

64,622 767,424 319,104 26,023 448,194

33,352 64,566 70,380 38,360 347,168

264,904 366,192 166,119 117,736 210,686

102,197 162,617 168,630 57,019 189,957

47,134 43,588 464,877 231,792 115,164

111,808 129,219 31,036 773,562 249,566

192,152 9,862 181,368 119,221 1,036,146

10,548,288

13,824,645

Number

29.4 32.8 33.5 30.4 31.4

28.5 30.3 28.6 26.8 32.7

33.2 31.1 29.5 35.8 29.9

31.5 33.6 34.2 32.3 31.9

28.8 29.5 32.9 32.5 29.0

26.6 29.9 30.3 27.8 32.2

34.1 24.9 26.1 33.2 28.9

31.1

6.2

% of pop.

Widowed (c)

148,392 1,614,154 584,158 58,443 1,002,841

94,229 171,195 193,379 110,235 738,330

589,764 831,524 427,568 200,786 495,091

253,093 269,647 309,736 134,547 420,506

117,686 117,974 998,261 501,833 311,722

337,636 321,326 76,119 2,123,992 474,330

339,838 30,692 543,815 230,295 2,626,079

23,979,708

154,181,509

Number

67.5 68.9 61.3 68.2 70.3

80.5 80.3 78.7 77.1 69.6

73.9 70.6 75.9 61.1 70.4

78.1 55.8 62.9 76.2 70.7

72.0 79.9 70.7 70.3 78.5

80.3 74.3 74.3 76.3 61.2

60.4 77.5 78.3 64.1 73.3

70.7

83.6

% of pop.

H.S. diploma or more (d)

TABLE A DEMOGRAPHIC, SOCIAL, HEALTH AND ECONOMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THE POPULATION 65 YEARS AND OVER FOR THE UNITED STATES AND STATES: 2003

61,543 727,434 286,936 29,673 437,591

38,690 75,285 67,856 42,229 302,980

262,979 362,541 179,016 105,367 216,088

104,014 153,982 154,896 58,159 166,513

35,805 39,923 446,838 224,701 126,812

127,909 126,998 29,743 756,756 226,317

176,242 10,906 173,040 110,232 955,218

10,091,191

29,090,016

Number

28.0 31.0 30.1 34.6 30.7

33.1 35.3 27.6 29.5 28.6

33.0 30.8 31.8 32.0 30.7

32.1 31.8 31.4 32.9 28.0

21.9 27.1 31.7 31.5 31.9

30.4 29.3 29.0 27.2 29.2

31.3 27.5 24.9 30.7 26.7

29.8

10.3

% of pop.

Living alone

100,553 886,578 418,899 33,400 564,251

46,445 81,040 88,450 53,423 389,478

280,149 474,500 195,997 178,321 303,777

132,384 230,553 230,319 71,210 231,065

56,213 64,694 549,012 297,100 146,734

160,706 149,327 39,005 992,613 353,424

264,686 17,934 255,679 181,316 1,440,126

13,526,817

37,458,292

Number

45.8 37.8 43.9 39.0 39.6

39.7 38.0 36.0 37.4 36.7

35.1 40.3 34.8 54.2 43.2

40.8 47.7 46.7 40.3 38.9

34.4 43.8 38.9 41.6 36.9

38.2 34.5 38.1 35.7 45.6

47.0 45.3 36.8 50.5 40.2

39.9

14.3

% of pop.

With a disability (e)

24,755 26,908 24,425 21,683 25,361

26,303 23,849 29,418 26,372 31,931

26,207 26,501 27,990 20,973 24,854

25,737 21,243 21,236 25,056 33,203

39,378 26,377 27,311 25,570 25,032

27,258 32,306 32,850 27,798 24,774

21,831 37,540 30,228 23,754 31,705

26,736

43,564

Median household income (f)

28,693 280,128 122,492 10,834 116,087

9,790 19,423 19,659 12,717 76,622

74,632 98,727 47,302 53,920 72,912

25,511 68,445 72,917 16,671 51,954

12,200 11,830 132,054 53,577 30,376

40,135 23,241 6,358 267,859 103,269

76,889 1,896 54,653 46,209 272,030

3,319,167

35,846,289

Number

13.1 12.0 12.9 12.6 8.1

8.4 9.1 8.0 8.9 7.2

9.4 8.4 8.4 16.4 10.4

7.9 14.2 14.8 9.4 8.7

7.5 8.0 9.4 7.5 7.6

9.5 5.4 6.2 9.6 13.3

13.7 4.8 7.9 12.9 7.6

9.8

12.7

% of pop.

In poverty (g)

DEMOGRAPHICS

469


470

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99,781 683,271 2,062,327 196,568 75,961 788,419 656,630 263,926 662,878 56,768 63,347

South Dakota .................................. Tennessee ........................................ Texas ................................................ Utah ................................................. Vermont ..........................................

Virginia ........................................... Washington ..................................... West Virginia .................................. Wisconsin ........................................ Wyoming .........................................

District of Columbia ...................... 12.0

11.0 11.0 14.9 12.5 11.6

13.6 12.0 9.6 8.5 12.7

12.6 12.4 14.8 13.6 12.2

% of pop.

60.7

73.2 77.0 72.2 75.2 82.8

76.6 70.8 75.4 82.3 77.6

75.2 75.5 70.6 69.6 73.2

Sex ratio (a)

47,090

155,154 67,822 9,396 32,995 3,383

1,688 81,009 651,641 14,581 2,623

56,455 27,033 150,240 10,137 115,259

Number

74.3

19.7 10.3 3.6 5.0 6.0

1.7 11.9 31.6 7.4 3.5

13.2 6.2 8.5 7.2 23.6

% of pop.

Minority (b)

21,291

250,330 194,665 85,660 197,194 15,905

30,255 226,794 646,663 53,073 22,370

130,847 130,168 616,213 51,543 153,572

Number

44,202

538,141 538,467 156,614 475,051 46,559

72,499 430,501 1,352,673 165,108 55,679

305,937 342,153 1,248,243 88,621 320,044

Number

69.8

68.3 82.0 59.3 71.7 82.0

72.7 63.0 65.6 84.0 73.3

71.3 78.9 70.9 62.7 65.6

% of pop.

H.S. diploma or more (d)

27,194

224,700 204,912 83,365 207,315 17,099

32,952 209,696 581,419 48,708 23,811

140,278 129,672 576,773 49,096 132,989

Number

42.9

28.5 31.2 31.6 31.3 30.1

33.0 30.7 28.2 24.8 31.3

32.7 29.9 32.8 34.7 27.2

% of pop.

Living alone

22,706

302,056 253,253 131,573 239,975 22,796

37,693 304,920 875,493 75,869 29,080

186,894 167,587 664,860 56,994 195,707

Number

35.8

38.3 38.6 49.9 36.2 40.2

37.8 44.6 42.5 38.6 38.3

43.6 38.7 37.8 40.3 40.1

% of pop.

With a disability (e)

31,198

31,863 31,882 21,467 25,834 27,785

24,042 23,697 25,403 32,754 24,920

24,190 25,997 24,317 23,212 26,593

Median household income (f)

9,114

71,190 44,934 33,581 48,132 3,503

10,729 84,659 267,633 15,007 6,766

48,269 35,949 153,438 14,978 59,273

Number

14.4

9.0 6.8 12.7 7.3 6.2

10.8 12.4 13.0 7.6 8.9

11.3 8.3 8.7 10.6 12.1

% of pop.

In poverty (g)

(may be of they reported one or more of the following disabilities: 1) sensory disability; 2) physical disability; 3) mental disability; 4) self-care disablity; or 5) go-outside-home disability. For the total U.S. population with a disability, the universe is the population 5 years and over. (f) Median household income in the last 12 months (2003 inflation-adjusted dollars) for households with a householder 65 years and over. (g) Poverty status was determined for everyone except those in institutions, military group quarters, college dormitories, and unrelated individuals under 15 years old. These groups were excluded from the denominator when calculating poverty rates

33.6

31.8 29.6 32.5 29.7 28.0

30.3 33.2 31.4 27.0 29.4

30.5 30.0 35.0 36.4 31.5

% of pop.

Widowed (c)

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, 2003 American Community Survey. Note: The universe for the 2003 American Community Survey is the household population. Those in group quarters (e.g. nursing facilities, etc.) are not included in the universe. Age classification is based on the age of the person in complete years at the time of interview for the American Community Survey in 2003. Both age and date of birth are used in combination to calculate the most accurate age at the time of interview. (a) The sex ratio is the number of males per 100 females. (b) The category minority includes people who identified themselves as Black, Asian, American Indian or Alaska Native, Native Hawaiian or Other Pacific Islander, Some other race, Two or more races, or Hispanic

428,874 433,381 1,760,778 141,420 488,162

Number

Oklahoma ....................................... Oregon ............................................. Pennsylvania .................................. Rhode Island .................................. South Carolina ...............................

State of jurisdiction

Population

TABLE A DEMOGRAPHIC, SOCIAL, HEALTH AND ECONOMIC CHARACTERISTICS OF THE POPULATION 65 YEARS AND OVER FOR THE UNITED STATES AND STATES: 2003 – CONTINUED

DEMOGRAPHICS

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WOMEN IN STATE GOVERNMENT

Women in State Government: Historical Overview and Current Trends By Susan J. Carroll In recent years the movement of women into state-level offices has slowed following several decades of gains, and the 2004 elections continued this pattern of stagnation, producing little change in the numbers of women officials. Efforts to actively recruit women for elective and appointive positions will be critical in determining what the future holds for women in state government. In the history of our nation, women are relative newcomers among state elected and appointed officials. Women first entered state-level offices in the 1920s following passage and ratification of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution which granted women suffrage. However, significant growth in the numbers of women in office occurred only after the emergence of the contemporary women’s movement during the late-1960s and early-1970s. Since the mid1970s, as data collected by the Center for American Women and Politics show,1 women have greatly increased their numbers among elected and appointed officials in state government. In recent years, however, progress has slowed, and nationwide statistics show a leveling off in the numbers of women serving in state-level offices. The 2004 elections continued the pattern of stagnation with the numbers of women nationwide showing little change following the elections.

Governors Since the founding of our country, only 28 women (18 Democrats, 10 Republicans) have served as state governors (Table A), and only one woman has served as governor of a U.S. territory (Puerto Rico).2 A majority of the states, 29, have never had a woman chief executive. Arizona is the only state to have had three women governors as well as the only state where a woman succeeded another as governor. Connecticut, Texas, Kansas, Washington and New Hampshire have each had two women governors although one of the governors of New Hampshire, Vesta Roy, served for only seven days following the death of an incumbent. The first woman governor, Nellie Taylor Ross of Wyoming, was selected in a special election to succeed her deceased husband in 1925. Fifteen days later a second woman, Miriam “Ma” Ferguson, was inaugurated as governor of Texas, having been elected

as a surrogate for her husband, a former governor who had been impeached and consequently was barred constitutionally from running again. Ferguson’s campaign slogan was “Two governors for the price of one.”3 The third woman to serve as a governor, Lurleen Wallace of Alabama, who campaigned on the slogan, “Let George do it,” was similarly elected to replace a husband who was constitutionally prohibited from seeking another term.4 The first woman elected in her own right (i.e., without following her husband) into the governorship was Ella Grasso, who presided over the state of Connecticut from 1975 to 1980. Eighteen of the women governors (including Grasso) who have served since the mid-1970s were elected in their own right. The other seven became governor through constitutional succession; only one of these seven was subsequently elected to a full term. Eight women serve as governors in 2005, down from a record nine women who held governorships simultaneously at the end of 2004. Three states governed by women (Montana, Utah and Delaware) held elections in 2004. Of the three women governors of these states, only Ruth Ann Minner (D) of Delaware sought re-election,5 and she won. Two other women in addition to Minner were gubernatorial candidates in 2004. Christine Gregoire (D) of Washington won her gubernatorial bid for an open seat by the slimmest of margins following a statewide manual recount. The other woman candidate, Claire McCaskill (D) of Missouri, lost her gubernatorial race. The eight women (6 Democrats, 2 Republicans) who serve as chief executives of their states in 2005 are: Ruth Ann Minner (D-Del.), Jennifer M. Granholm (D-Mich.), Linda Lingle (R-Hawaii), Janet Napolitano (D-Ariz.), Kathleen Sebelius (D-Kan.), Kathleen Blanco (DLa.), M. Jodi Rell (R-Conn.) and Christine Gregoire (D-Wash.). The Council of State Governments

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Table A: Women Governors Throughout History Name (party-state)

Dates served

Special circumstances

Nellie Tayloe Ross (D-WY) Miriam “Ma” Ferguson (D-TX)

1925–1927 1925–1927, 1933–1935

Lurleen Wallace (D-AL) Ella Grasso (D-CT) Dixy Lee Ray (D-WA) Vesta Roy (R-NH)

1967–1968 1975–1980 1977–1981 1982–1983

Won special election to replace deceased husband. Inaugurated 15 days after Ross; elected as surrogate for husband who could not succeed himself. Elected as surrogate for husband who could not succeed himself. First woman elected governor in her own right; resigned for health reasons.

Martha Layne Collins (D-KY) Madeleine Kunin (D-VT) Kay Orr (R-NE)

1984–1987 1985–1991 1987–1991

Rose Mofford (D-AZ) Joan Finney (D-KS) Ann Richards (D-TX)

1988–1991 1991–1995 1991–1995

Barbara Roberts (D-OR) Christine Todd Whitman (R-NJ)

1991–1995 1994–2001

Jeanne Shaheen (D-NH) Jane Dee Hull (R-AZ) Nancy Hollister (R-OH)

1997–2003 1997–2003 1998–1999

Jane Swift (R-MA)

2001–2003

Judy Martz (R-MT) Olene Walker (R-UT)

2001–2005 2003–2005

Ruth Ann Minner (D-DE) Jennifer M. Granholm (D-MI) Linda Lingle (R-HI) Janet Napolitano (D-AZ) Kathleen Sebelius (D-KS) Kathleen Blanco (D-LA) M. Jodi Rell (R-CT) Christine Gregoire (D-WA)

2001–present 2003–present 2003–present 2003–present 2003–present 2004–present 2004–present 2005–present

Elected to state senate and chosen as senate president; served as governor for seven days when incumbent died. First woman to serve three terms as governor. First Republican woman governor and first woman to defeat another woman in a gubernatorial race. Elected as secretary of state, succeeded governor who was impeached and convicted. First woman to defeat an incumbent governor.

Resigned to take presidential appointment as commissioner of the Environmental Protection Agency. Elected as secretary of state, succeeded governor who resigned; later elected to a full term. Elected lieutenant governor; served as governor for 11 days when predecessor took U.S. Senate seat and successor had not yet been sworn in. Elected as lieutenant governor, succeeded governor who resigned for an ambassadorial appointment. Elected as lieutenant governor, succeeded governor who resigned to take a federal appointment.

First woman to succeed another woman as governor. Father was governor of Ohio. Elected as lieutenant governor, succeeded governor who resigned.

Source: Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University.

Other Statewide Elected and Appointed Officials in the Executive Branch The states vary greatly in their numbers of statewide elected and appointed officials. For example, Maine, New Hampshire and New Jersey have only one statewide elected official, the governor, while North Dakota, at the other extreme, has 12. The first woman to ever hold a major statewide office was Soledad C. Chacon (D-N.M.) who was secretary of state in New Mexico from 1923–26;6 Delaware, Kentucky, New York, South Dakota and Texas also had women secretaries of state in the 1920s. The first woman treasurer, Grace B. Urbahns (R-Indiana) also served during this time period, from 1926–1932. Several more years passed before a woman be472

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came lieutenant governor. Matilda R. Wilson (RMich.) served briefly as lieutenant governor of Michigan in 1940 when she was appointed to fill an expiring term. However, the first woman elected as a lieutenant governor was Consuelo N. Bailey (R-Vt.) who served from 1955–1956. An additional three decades passed before a woman became attorney general of a state; the first was Arlene Violet (R-R.I.) who served from 1985–1987. As evident from Figure A, the proportion of women among statewide elective officials has grown substantially over the past three decades. From 1971 to 1985 the increases were small and incremental. Then, between 1983 and 1995, a period of significant growth, the numbers and proportions of women serving in statewide office more than doubled. Since 1995, the numbers and proportions have leveled off.

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WOMEN IN STATE GOVERNMENT The number of women serving in statewide elective offices actually decreased by two as a result of the 2004 elections, and slightly fewer women, 79,7 currently hold statewide offices than a decade ago when there were 84 women. In early 2005, women hold 25.1 percent of the 315 statewide elective positions. In addition to the eight women governors, women serve as lieutenant governors in 16, or 37.2 percent, of the 43 states that elect lieutenant governors in statewide elections; this is the same number of women who served as lieutenant governor in 2004.8 Other women statewide elected officials include: 12 secretaries of state, eight state treasurers, four attorney generals, 10 chief education officials, seven state auditors, four public service commissioners, three state comptroller/controllers, two chief agricultural officials, one commissioner of insurance, two commissioners of labor and two corporation commissioners. The women serving in statewide elective office include two African Americans (the lieutenant governor of Ohio and the state treasurer of Connecticut) as well as three Latinas (the secretary of state of New Mexico, the attorney general of New Mexico, and the superintendent of public instruction for Oregon). Women are slightly better represented among top appointed officials in state government. According to nationwide data collected by the Center on Women in Government and Civil Society at SUNY-Albany, in the second half of 2004 women constituted 29.7 percent of department heads with major policy-making responsibilities (including heads of departments, agencies, offices, boards, commissions and authorities) who were appointed by governors. Similarly, women were 41.1 percent of the top appointed advisors in governors’ offices. These 2004 figures represent a slight increase since 2003 and a more notable increase since 1998 when women were 23.7 percent of department heads and 39.6 percent of governors’ top advisors. Women of color are also slightly better represented among these appointed officials than among statewide elective officials,9 with women of color constitut-

Table B: Women Statewide Elected Officials, 2005 State

Governor

Lieutenant governor

Attorney general

Secretary of state

Treasurer

Alabama ......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ........................... Arkansas ........................ California .......................

★ ★ W ★ ★

W ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

W ... W ★ ★

W ... ★ ★ ★

Colorado ........................ Connecticut .................... Delaware ........................ Florida ............................ Georgia ...........................

★ W W ★ ★

W ★ ★ W ★

★ ★ W ★ ★

W W ... ... W

★ W ★ ... ...

Hawaii ............................ Idaho ............................... Illinois ............................. Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................

W ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ W W

... ★ W ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ W ★ ★

Kansas ............................ Kentucky ........................ Louisiana ....................... Maine .............................. Maryland .......................

W ★ W ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ...

W ★ ★ ... ...

Massachusetts ............... Michigan ........................ Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

★ W ★ ★ ★

W ★ W W ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ W W ★ W

★ ... ... ★ W

Montana ......................... Nebraska ........................ Nevada ............................ New Hampshire ............. New Jersey .....................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ W ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

New Mexico ................... New York ........................ North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

W W W ★ W

W ★ ★ ★ ★

W ... W ★ ★

★ ... ★ W ★

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ............................ Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

W ... W ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ W ★ ★

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas ............................... Utah ................................ Vermont .........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ... W

★ ... ... ★ ★

Virginia .......................... Washington .................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ....................... Wyoming ........................

★ W ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... W ...

★ ★ ★ W ...

... ★ W ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ W

Source: Data for elected officials are current as of January 2005 and have been provided by the Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University. Key: ★—Denotes that this position is filled through a statewide election. W—Denotes that this position is filled through a statewide election and is held by a woman. . . .—Denotes that this position is filled through methods other than a statewide election.

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Figure A: Proportion of Women Among Statewide Elective Officials 35% 28.5%

30%

27.6% 25.9%

25%

27.6% 27.4% 25.7% 25.6% 25.1%

20% 18.2% 13.9%

15% 9.8%

10.7% 10.5%

10% 7.0% 5% 0%

1971 1975 1979 1983 1987 1991 1995 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Source: Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University.

ing 5.8 percent of all department heads and 7.7 percent of top advisors in governors’ offices.10

Justices on Courts of Last Resort The first woman to win election to a state court of last resort was Florence E. Allen, who was elected to the Ohio Supreme Court in 1922 and re-elected in 1928. Nevertheless, it was not until 1960 that a second woman, Lorna Lockwood of Arizona, was elected to a state supreme court. In 1965 Lockwood’s colleagues on the Arizona Supreme Court elected her chief justice, thereby also making her the first woman in history to preside over a state court of last resort.11 According to the National Center for State Courts, 95, or 28.2 percent, of the 337 justices on state courts of last resort in early 2005 are women. Of the 52 chief justices of these courts, 17, or 32.7 percent, are women. The current chief justice of the New Mexico Supreme Court, Petra Jimenez Maes, is the first Latina in the country to hold this position. 474

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Women comprise a majority of justices on the courts of last resort in two states-New York and Ohio. Women constitute at least 40 percent of the justices (but less than a majority) on an additional 16 courts of last resort.

Legislators Even before 1920 when women won the right to vote across the country, a few women had been elected to legislatures in states that had granted the franchise to women. By 1971 the proportion of women serving in state legislatures across the country had grown to 4.5 percent, and by 2005 this proportion had increased almost fivefold to 22.5 percent. As Figure B illustrates, the proportion of women among legislators grew throughout the 1970s and 1980s. The rate of growth slowed in the 1990s, and similar to the pattern for statewide elected officials, the numbers and proportions of women legislators nationally have leveled off since the late 1990s. In

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WOMEN IN STATE GOVERNMENT fact, the same number of women, 1664, serves in state legislatures at the beginning of 2005 as in 1999 when there were also 1664 women legislators. Great variation exists across the states in the proportion of legislators who are women (see Table C). With 34.0 percent women in their legislatures, Maryland and Colorado are tied for first place among the states. They are closely followed by Delaware (33.9 percent), Arizona (33.3 percent), Nevada (33.3 percent), Vermont (33.3 percent) and Washington (33.3 percent). There seems to be no easy explanation for why these states have risen to the top, and indeed scholars who have statistically examined the variation among the states in the representation of women in their legislatures have found no simple patterns.12 At the other extreme, South Carolina with only 8.8 percent ranks last among the 50 states in the representation of women among its legislators. Accompanying South Carolina in the bottom five states are Alabama with 10.0 percent women, Ken-

tucky with 12.3 percent, Mississippi with 12.6 percent, and Pennsylvania with 12.6 percent. Six of the eight states with the lowest proportions of women are Southern or border states. No Southern state ranks among the top 20, and only Florida, with 23.8 percent women, is above the national average. These rankings suggest that the South lags behind the rest of the country in the representation of women within its legislatures. In early 2005, women hold 402, or 20.4 percent, of all state senate seats and 1262, or 23.3 percent, of all state house seats across the country. Although state legislators nationally have become considerably more Republican over the last decade and a half with legislators now evenly divided between the two parties,13 the same is not true for women legislators. In 2005 as in the past, Democrats substantially outnumber Republicans among women state legislators. Among women state senators nationwide, 63.8 percent are Democrats; among women state representatives, 62.2

Figure B: Proportion of Women Among State Legislators 30%

25% 22.4%

22.5%

22.4%

22.7% 22.4% 22.5%

22.5%

20.6%

20% 18.3% 15.7%

15% 13.3%

10.3%

10%

8.0% 4.5%

5%

0%

1971 1975 1979 1983 1987 1991 1995 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005

Source: Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University.

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Table C: Women in State Legislatures Senate

House/Assembly

Legislature (both houses)

State

Democrats

Republicans

% Women

Democrats

Republicans

% Women

% Women

Alabama .......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ............................ Arkansas .......................... California ........................

2 2 4 4 12

1 1 6 2 0

8.6% 15.0 33.3 17.1 30.0

9 4 10 12 19

2 4 10 4 6

10.5% 20.0 33.3 16.0 31.3

10.0% 18.3 33.3 16.3 30.8

49 32 4 39 10

Colorado .......................... Connecticut ..................... Delaware ......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................

9 7 4 5 5

2 2 3 4 2

31.4 25.0 33.3 22.5 12.5

19 27 7 13 26

4 18 7 16 10

35.4 29.8 34.1 23.3 20.0

34.0 28.9 33.9 23.8 18.2

1 13 3 22 33

Hawaii ............................. Idaho ............................... Illinois ............................. Indiana ............................ Iowa .................................

6 1 9 6 1

0 3 5 5 4

24.0 11.4 23.7 22.0 10.0

9 9 24 7 17

6 16 11 7 8

29.4 35.7 29.7 14.0 25.0

27.6 27.6 27.7 16.7 20.0

16 16 15 36 29

Kansas ............................. Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ......................... Maine .............................. Maryland .........................

4 1 5 6 12

9 5 1 5 3

32.5 15.8 15.4 31.4 31.9

19 8 13 24 38

21 3 5 9 11

32.0 11.0 17.1 21.9 34.8

32.1 12.3 16.7 23.7 34.0

8 48 36 23 1

Massachusetts ................. Michigan ......................... Minnesota ....................... Mississippi ...................... Missouri ..........................

10 5 11 4 4

0 6 11 0 2

25.0 28.9 34.3 7.7 17.6

33 13 26 13 25

6 9 11 5 11

24.4 17.3 27.6 (a) 14.8 22.1

24.5 20.3 29.9 12.6 21.3

20 27 12 46 26

Montana .......................... Nebraska (b) ................... Nevada ............................ New Hampshire .............. New Jersey ......................

6 1 —Nonpartisan— 4 2 4 1 4 2

14.0 24.5 28.6 20.8 15.0

22 8 —Unicameral— 11 4 72 53 10 3

30.0 35.7 31.3 16.3

24.7 24.5 33.3 30.7 15.8

19 20 4 11 42

New Mexico .................... New York ........................ North Carolina ................ North Dakota .................. Ohio .................................

7 7 7 3 3

4 3 0 2 2

26.2 16.1 14.0 10.6 15.2

12 31 22 7 13

12 9 10 11 8

34.4 26.7 26.7 19.1 21.2

31.3 23.6 22.9 16.3 19.7

9 24 25 39 31

Oklahoma ........................ Oregon ............................. Pennsylvania ................... Rhode Island ................... South Carolina ................

6 8 4 7 1

2 1 4 1 0

16.7 30.0 16.0 21.1 2.2

5 9 9 9 7

9 8 15 2 7

13.9 28.3 11.8 14.7 11.3

14.8 28.9 12.6 16.8 8.8

43 13 46 35 50

South Dakota .................. Tennessee ........................ Texas ............................... Utah ................................. Vermont ...........................

2 3 2 3 8

1 3 2 2 2

8.6 18.2 12.9 17.2 33.3

4 12 13 6 36

10 5 19 10 14

20.0 17.2 21.3 21.3 33.3 (c)

16.2 17.4 19.9 20.2 33.3

41 34 30 28 4

Virginia ........................... Washington ..................... West Virginia .................. Wisconsin ........................ Wyoming .........................

7 15 0 3 3

1 5 4 5 1

20.0 40.8 11.8 24.2 13.3

6 19 12 12 4

6 10 6 14 5

12.0 29.6 18.0 26.3 15.0

14.3 33.3 16.4 25.8 14.4

45 4 38 18 44

Source: Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University. Figures are as of January 2005. Key: (a)—Includes one member of the Independence Party. (b)—Nebraska has a unicameral legislature with nonpartisan elections. (c)—Includes two members of the Progressive Party.

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State rank


WOMEN IN STATE GOVERNMENT percent are Democrats. Almost one-fifth of women state legislators, 18.7 percent, are women of color. Of the 83 senators and 229 representatives serving in legislatures in early 2004, all but 18 are Democrats. African American women hold 56 seats in state senates and 158 seats in state houses across 39 states. Latinas are concentrated in 16 states; they hold 19 senate and 47 house seats. Asian American women count among their numbers six senators and 17 representatives in eight states while Native American women hold two senate and seven house seats in five states.

Looking Toward the Future Although women have made substantial progress over time in increasing their presence in state government, the recent leveling off of women’s numbers among statewide elective officials and state legislators is a puzzling, and for many a troubling, development. At a minimum, the leveling off is evidence that increases over time are not inevitable; there is no invisible hand at work to insure that more women will seek and be elected to office with each subsequent election. The leveling off has implications for women’s representation not only among state legislators and nongubernatorial statewide officeholders, but also among governors and members of Congress. Probably the most striking positive development for women in state government in recent years has been the increase in women governors. Of the 28 women in the entire history of our country who have served as governors, half (14) have served all or part of their terms during the first five years of the 21st century. Of the eight sitting governors, seven held statewide elective office before running for governor; three were lieutenant governors, three served as attorney generals and one was her state’s insurance commissioner. Four of the current women governors also served in their state legislatures. Similarly, many of the women who run for Congress have gained experience and visibility in state government before seeking federal office. Of the 65 women members of the U.S. House, 29 served in their state houses, 17 in their state senates and two in statewide elective offices; of the 14 women U.S. senators, seven served in their state legislatures, two in statewide elective offices and one in an appointed state cabinet post. Activists who are interested in increasing the numbers of women serving in office often refer to a political “pipeline” through which potential women candidates for higher level office come forward from amongst the pool of women who have gained expe-

rience at lower levels of office. Clearly, the pipeline has worked well in the case of the current women governors and members of Congress. But what will happen if the pool of candidates in statewide and state legislative office continues to stagnate or even decline? Then, the number of politically experienced women with the visibility and contacts necessary to step forward to run for governor or a seat in the U.S. House or Senate is also likely to stagnate or decline. While several different factors may be responsible for the recent leveling off in the numbers of women in statewide elective and state legislative office, a lack of effective recruitment certainly is one of the most important. Statistics on the number of women candidates over time seem clearly to point to a problem with recruitment. For example, in 2004 a total of 2,220 women were general election candidates for 5,809 seats up for election in state legislatures. Although the number of state legislative seats up for election varies from year to year, fewer women ran for the state legislature in 2004 than in any year since 1990!14 Clearly, then, the number of women stepping forward to run for state legislative seats has not been increasing. Research has found that women who run for office are less likely than their male counterparts to be “self-starters.” Women more often than men seek office only after receiving encouragement from others. For example, one recent study of major party candidates in state legislative races found that only 11 percent of women, compared with 37 percent of men, said that it was entirely their own idea to run for the legislature; in contrast, 37 percent of women, compared with 18 percent of men, reported that they had not seriously thought about running until someone else suggested it.15 Another recent study of people in the professions from which political candidates are most likely to emerge (i.e., law, business, education and politics) found that notably fewer women (43 percent) than men (59 percent) had ever considered running for office.16 Findings such as these suggest that the future for women in state government will depend, at least in part, upon the strength of efforts to actively recruit women for both elected and appointed positions. Legislative leaders, public officials, party leaders and advocacy organizations can help by renewing their commitment and augmenting their efforts to identify and offer support to potential women candidates, especially in winnable races with open seats or vulnerable incumbents. Recruitment efforts may well be the key to determining whether the numbers of women officials continue to stagnate (or even deThe Council of State Governments

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WOMEN IN STATE GOVERNMENT cline) or whether the numbers again begin to move steadily upward as they did in earlier decades.

Notes 1 All statistical information in this essay, unless otherwise noted, has been provided by the Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP), Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers University. Additional information is available at www.cawp.rutgers.edu. I would especially like to thank several of my colleagues at CAWP—Gilda Morales, Linda Phillips, Kathleen Casey and Amy Bain—for their assistance with the data for this essay. 2 Sila Calderon (Popular Democratic Party) served as governor of Puerto Rico from 2001 to 2004. 3 Martin Gruberg, Women in American Politics (Oshkosh, WI: Academia Press, 1968), 189. 4 Ibid., 190. 5 Judy Martz (R) of Montana did not seek re-election. Olene Walker (R) of Utah failed to win her party’s nomination and thus was not a candidate in the general election. Sila Calderon (Popular Democratic Party), who served as governor of Puerto Rico in 2004, also did not seek re-election. 6 Women did serve as superintendents of public instruction in a few states earlier than this. 7 These 79 women serving in statewide elective office include 35 Democrats, 41 Republicans and 3 nonpartisans. 8 Nine states held elections for lieutenant governor in 2004. One incumbent lieutenant governor was re-elected, one was defeated but replaced by a woman, and four other women candidates all lost. The net result was a slight partisan shift with one more Republican and one fewer Democrat (6 Democrats, 10 Republicans) serving in 2005 than in 2004, 9 Women of color comprise less than 2 percent of all statewide elective officials. 10 “Women’s Leadership Profile 2004,” A Report of the Center for Women in Government and Civil Society, (Uni-

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versity at Albany, State University of New York, Fall 2004). http://www.cwig.albany.edu/2004leadershipprofile2004. pdf. 11 See note 3 above, 190, 192. 12 See, for example, Barbara Norrander and Clyde Wilcox, “The Geography of Gender Power: Women in State Legislatures,” in Sue Thomas and Clyde Wilcox, ed., Women and Elective Office: Past, Present, and Future, (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998). 13 Democrats did register gains in legislative races in the 2004 elections, and as a result, a slight Republican advantage among legislators in 2004 has disappeared, resulting in an even split between Democrats and Republicans nationally. See “Perfect Parity in Nation’s State Legislatures,” NCSL News, http://www.ncsl.org/programs/press/ 2004/pr041103a.htm. 14 There were 2,375 women candidates for state legislative seats in 1992; 2,285 in 1994; 2,277 in 1996; 2,280 in 1998; 2,228 in 2000; and 2,348 in 2002. 15 Gary Moncrief, Peverill Squire, and Malcolm Jewell, Who Runs for the Legislature? (New York: Prentice-Hall, 2001), Table 5.5, 102; see also Susan J. Carroll and Wendy S. Strimling, Women’s Routes to Elective Office: A Comparison With Men’s (New Brunswick, NJ: Center for the American Woman and Politics, 1983). 16 Richard L. Fox and Jennifer Lawless, “Entering the Arena: Gender and the Initial Decision to Run for Office, American Journal of Political Science, forthcoming 2005.

About the Author Susan J. Carroll is professor of Political Science and Women’s and Gender Studies at Rutgers University and Senior Scholar at the Center for American Women and Politics (CAWP) of the Eagleton Institute of Politics. She has published numerous works on women public officials, women candidates, and various aspects of women’s participation in American politics.

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Chapter Eight

STATE MANAGEMENT AND ADMINISTRATION

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Trends in State Information and Technology Management By Chris Dixon, Drew Leatherby and Mary Gay Whitmer State governments are becoming more disciplined in their approach to investing in and managing information technology, adopting an enterprise view with centralized oversight, common standards and shared solutions across agencies. The opportunities for improved service delivery, information sharing and economic growth through strategic technology deployment must be weighed against the potential privacy and security risks. IT Governance State chief information officers (CIOs) are typically asked to streamline state information technology (IT) budgets, justify IT spending and increase service delivery and efficiency, both internally and externally. CIOs address these issues through IT governance, which consists of the leadership, organizational structures, direction and processes that ensure information technology sustains and extends the enterprise’s mission and objectives in a planned manner. IT governance frameworks can focus on IT organizational models, including reorganization and consolidation strategies, service delivery reform and shared services among agencies. Reorganization strategies involve business process improvement and provide the framework for looking for redundancies in government services and work toward the consolidation of services that are redundant. Consolidation strategies ask and try to answer questions such as: is authority centralized; what are the roles of the different players; and, how are IT programs organized? Service reform, another aspect of IT governance frameworks, involves both internal and external customers. Internal customer service reform focuses on ways of improving help to agencies. External customer service reform focuses on the citizen and their access to state government services, such as providing one-stop online services that can provide the experience of “seamless government” for the citizen customer. This process would be termed a shared services model; delivering transparent one-stop services to the public through cooperation with different levels of government and across agencies (e.g., by building an on-line application that all agencies can use to expedite the application for a business permit). These IT governance framework models are typically organized around a steering committee or governing body made up of representatives from the

various state agencies, or at higher levels, can even involve all three branches of government.

IT Procurement States purchase a wide array of IT products and services ranging from desktop computers to elaborate financial and resource management systems. State IT procurement differs from the procurement of other types of products and services, since many IT systems are inherently complex and technology is evolving at an ever-accelerating pace. These differences have fueled a need to update state IT procurement processes to make them more flexible, especially for large IT procurements which may involve multiple contractors and the acquisition of both IT products and services. However, increased procurement flexibility must be balanced with the need to maintain or even improve the accountability, fairness and integrity of those processes. The benefits of increased procurement flexibility include: (1) improving the ability of contractors to provide their expertise to states regarding the types of solutions that could accomplish states’ IT needs and (2) ensuring reasonable procurement timeframes so that technology is not obsolete by the time the procurement process has been completed. Well-written Requests for Proposals (RFPs) and good project management and contract administration are other ways of ensuring successful, flexible and accountable state IT procurement processes. In updating their procurement processes, states also are re-examining their approaches to IT contract terms and conditions, such as liability limitations and intellectual property clauses, in order to ensure that they are fair and accurately reflect the true needs and risks of the state and contractor. In September 2004, the National Association of State Chief Information Officers (NASCIO) issued recommendations on liability limitations clauses and encourages states to consider limiting potential vendor liability in order The Council of State Governments

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INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY to maximize the size and quality of the pool of potential contractors and to minimize the total contract price.1 The state CIO’s role in IT procurement varies from state-to-state. Approximately one-fifth of CIOs have responsibility for statewide IT procurement (usually above a specified dollar threshold), while approximately half of the state CIOs share responsibility with their state’s procurement office. While state CIOs’ responsibility over IT procurement varies across the states, the state CIOs can play an important role in educating state policy-makers, procurement officials and attorneys, and others on the importance of the procurement process to ensure that the value of state IT systems and services is maximized.

Privacy New technologies that are emerging in state government present opportunities to conduct business

and provide citizen services in new and often more efficient ways. However, they can have unintended consequences that could place citizens’ personal information, such as Social Security numbers, at risk. State CIOs can serve an important role in identifying and addressing those unintended consequences. By addressing potential privacy concerns early, states can foster citizens’ trust that their personal information will be kept safe from unauthorized disclosure and use. Garnering citizens’ trust is the key to facilitating the expansion and enhancement of e-government applications and systems. Examples of emerging technologies include: camera phones, wireless devices, such as personal digital assistants, RFID (radio frequency identification) tags, data mining, and e-authentication.2 New uses of existing technologies, such as email and spoofing of legitimate Web sites, also can create threats to citizens’ privacy. Examples include: spam, spyware,

Figure A: State CIO Reporting

Source: NASCIO staff research as of March 23, 2005.

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INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY phishing, adware and malware. When introducing new technologies, states must identify potential unintended consequences to citizens’ personal information and “bake privacy into” these technological solutions. Moreover, as states create new IT systems that handle citizens’ personal information, they must ensure that any potential privacy concerns are addressed and integrated into the new system’s development. Finally, states should not underestimate the ingenuity of state employees to bring new technologies, such as camera phones and other wireless devices, into the workplace and use them in a way that could compromise the privacy of citizens’ personal information. The creation of sound workplace privacy policies can provide employees with guidance as to how and when they may use such technologies and what will happen if they misuse them. The Fair Information Use Principles, which include the concepts of notice, consent, access, security and enforcement, can provide states with guidance in creating such workplace privacy policies.3 The role of the state CIO is important to privacy, because the CIO has a broad view of the state enterprise and understands where privacy protections fit within the state’s enterprise architecture and business processes. State CIOs also are in a position to educate policymakers who are seeking to ensure privacy protections through legislation or regulation.

Economic Development Economic development is a perennial priority for the nation’s elected officials. It receives even more attention during periods of economic downturn or re-adjustment. State CIOs, providing services that are integral to the Internet economy, have long been acutely aware of the role they play in growing opportunities for their states’ citizens as the Internet economy continues to play havoc with Industrial Age business models. The most pervasive contribution that many state CIOs make to economic development is in blazing the digital-government trail in their states. This puts them in the role of practice leader in the provision of on-line services and as promoter of the Internet economy. For example, providing online government-to-citizen (G2C) services can “market” the state to a “trendsetting technology elite” who are seeking quality of life and economic opportunities related to technology advances. Providing a coherent selection of online government-to-business (G2B) services helps to reduce the overhead costs for existing businesses within the state and facilitates the innovative start-ups that expect to plug-and-play in the Internet.

Government-to-government (G2G) services provide front-end (i.e., Web portal) and back-end (i.e., transaction engines, data repositories, telecommunications) infrastructure that local governments can either use freely or purchase at discounts in order to jumpstart their Internet Age presences. When it comes to promoting adequate public access to the Internet, state CIOs are faced with a variety of options. While a consensus has emerged that pervasive high bandwidth connectivity will be integral-if not essential-to spurring the next wave of economic growth in the United States, there is still much debate as to the best way to foster pervasive access.4 That decision will likely be made based on the practical realities such as cost and the philosophical leanings of decision makers. Options will range from direct provision of high-speed infrastructure by the state to more market-based approaches. Even where the state is relying more on market-based solutions, the state CIO will still be involved in the discussion in order to see that the chosen approach will further the goal of pervasive access in underserved or economically stressed areas. State CIOs will be under pressure to leverage state spending to the benefit of the states’ local workforces and taxpayers. The state CIO, as the operator of what is likely the state’s largest IT enterprise, can bargain from a position of strength. Every penny saved in purchasing is a penny that can be used for worker retraining, economic development or tax cuts. Forrester research predicts the loss of U.S. IT jobs to overseas competitors will exceed 1 million in 2006 and reach 3.4 million by 2015.5 What the economic and political ramifications of these losses will be nationally and within a particular state or the government sector remains to be seen. Therefore, when called upon to advise on sourcing issues the state CIO will tread cautiously into a very complex political debate with cross-cutting ideologies and demographic interests that won’t fall into an easy partisan framework.

Homeland Security The role of the state CIO in homeland security continued to evolve in 2004. State CIOs continued to push for more mature approaches to information security within state government, seeking the authority and resources needed to enforce a variety of policies governing the use and protection of state information systems. Many state CIOs received at least small sums of money from grants awarded to the states under the federal State Homeland Security Grant Program. In most cases these funds were used The Council of State Governments

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INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY for risk assessments and the deployment of security technologies such as intrusion detection and prevention systems. State CIOs and state auditors also began working more closely to determine how best to leverage the strengths of their authorities and operations to best protect public information assets. State CIOs also pushed for better inclusion of information (or “cyber”) security in state homeland security assessment and strategy processes to ensure that the issue is adequately addressed in relation to chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear, and explosive (CBRNE) threats. State information and communications systems are vital to responding to CBRNE attacks. They are vulnerable to collateral damage from attacks on other targets as well as to direct cyber/physical attacks. Thus, state CIOs will continue to by the chief proponent of information security within state government. This role will continue to grow as decision makers increasingly rely on state CIOs to deploy new technologies that aggregate information from across state government for purposes of situational awareness and decision support on a daily basis and during crises.

Interoperability & Integration Many state CIOs have responsibility for their states’ voice and data communications infrastructure, including the systems that first responders use to communicate, and agencies use to share data across the enterprise. CIOs more and more are addressing issues related to public safety communications, spectrum management, data sharing and integration, seamless government and emerging enterprise technologies such as wireless and IP-based solutions. Questions state CIOs are facing regarding interoperability include, who needs to interoperate, and how; in real time, on demand, when needed, when authorized, etc. Interoperability is important for government to deliver needed and life-saving services to the public, through public safety and public service organizations. Voice and/or data communication is integral to cooperative efforts. Public safety and public service are suffering from interoperability problems. The inoperability problem is both technical and cultural and must be addressed on both levels. State CIOs recognize the need for better and more refined governance over interoperability. Good interoperability governance has value in improving services to the public. A suitable alignment and control framework allows efficient and responsible use of resources. Governance frameworks more and more will be used to align the state and local interoperability strategy with agencies’ public 484

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safety and public service strategies, and manage interoperability risks. Through these frameworks, CIOs can identify needs, evaluate priorities among needs, and take a leadership role in addressing a workable plan. State CIOs will play a key role in efforts to achieve interoperability and improve the public safety communications infrastructure at the local, state and national levels. State leadership is essential to the development of a coordinated approach to this issue and CIOs are uniquely positioned to develop an interoperability architecture that provides a roadmap for all to follow. Integration, unlike interoperability, is focused on the sharing of data across agencies and establishing enterprise data models and XML products to allow that information to be more readily shared. In addressing integration in their states, CIO’s will also examine governance issues; data standards initiatives under way at the national level; the integration of data in justice and health & human services; the evolving role of state agencies as intelligence providers and not just data collectors; and drivers for integration, such as homeland security, E-911, and increasing customer demands.

Notes 1 “Walking the Road to the Win-Win: NACIO Procurement Subcommittee’s Recommendations on Liability Limitations for State IT Contracting,” is available at https:// www.nacio.org/nascioCommittees/procurement. NACIO anticipates releasing an additional set of recommendations on intellectual property clauses in early 2005. They will be available on NASCIO’s Web site. 2 NASCIO has published committee briefs on the privacy implications of data mining and e-authentication. They are entitled, “Think Before You Dig: The Privacy Implications of Data Mining and Aggregation” and “Who Are You? I Really Wanna Know: E-Authentication and its Privacy Implications” and are available at: https://www.nascio.org/ nascioCommittees/privacy/. 3 For more information about the Fair Information Use Principles, which serve as the foundation of many U.S. and other countries’ privacy protection laws, please see NASCIO’s “Information Privacy: A Spotlight on Key Issues,” (February 2004). It is available at https://www.nascio. org/nascioCommittees/privacy/ for NASCIO member download and purchase by non-members. 4 Kathie Hackler and Ron Cowles, “Harnessing Broadband for Economic Growth,” Gartner teleconference, June 24, 2003. http://www4.gartner.com/2_events/audio conferences/2003/june/jun24tcm104.jsp. 5 W. David Gardner, “Offshore Outsourcers Said to Seek Risk Balance,” Information Week, May 17, 2004. http:// www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml? articleID=20301322.

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INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

About the Authors Chris Dixon is an issues coordinator for the National Association of Chief Information Officers (NASCIO) with responsibility for coordinating association activities in the areas of digital government, information security and economic development. Drew Leatherby is an issues coordinator for the Na-

tional Association of Chief Information Officers (NASCIO) with responsibility for coordinating association activities in the areas of IT governance & service reform, interoperability & integration, and emerging technologies. Mary Gay Whitmer is an issues coordinator for the National Association of Chief Information Officers (NASCIO) with responsibility for coordinating association activities in the areas of IT procurement and privacy.

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Table A STATEWIDE MANAGEMENT RESPONSIBILITIES OF THE CIO State or other jurisdiction

Arch./ HR/ Perf. Std. Dev. Budgeting Hiring Outsourcing mgmt.

Personnel Privacy Project Repolicy Planning Policies policies Procurement mgmt. Engineering Training

Alabama ............. Alaska ................. Arizona ............... Arkansas ............. California ...........

RA N.A. RAM RAM RA

A N.A. RA R R

A N.A. ... ... R

RA N.A. RA RAM R

A N.A. ... R R

RA N.A. RA RAM R

A N.A. RAM RAM R

RAM N.A. RAM RAM R

A N.A. R RAM R

A N.A. RA RM R

RA N.A. RAM RAM ...

A N.A. RA R R

Colorado ............. Connecticut ........ Delaware ............. Florida ................ Georgia ...............

N.A. RAM RAM RA RAM

N.A. RA RAM R RA

N.A. RA R ... R

N.A. RAM RAM R RAM

N.A. RAM R ... R

N.A. R RA R R

N.A. RAM RAM RA RAM

N.A. RAM RAM RA RAM

N.A. RAM RM ... RAM

N.A. RAM R ... RAM

N.A. RAM R R RAM

N.A. RAM R ... RAM

Hawaii ................. Idaho ................... Illinois ................. Indiana ................ Iowa ....................

RAM RA N.A. N.A. RAM

N.A. N.A. R

RM RAM N.A. N.A. R

RAM RA N.A. N.A. RA

RM RAM N.A. N.A. RAM

RM RAM N.A. N.A. RA

R RA N.A. N.A. R

R R N.A. N.A. R

R R N.A. N.A. R

RAM RA

N.A. N.A. ...

R R N.A. N.A. RAM

R

N.A. N.A. ...

Kansas ................ Kentucky ............ Louisiana ............ Maine .................. Maryland ............

RAM RAM RA A A

RAM RA R A RAM

R ... ... A R

A RAM RA A RA

AM R ... R R

R RA RA A RA

RAM RAM RA A RA

RAM RA RA A RA

RAM RM R A A

RA RA RA A RA

RAM RA RA R R

RAM ... ... R R

RAM RAM RA A A

Massachusetts .... Michigan ............. Minnesota ........... Mississippi .......... Missouri ..............

RAM RAM M RAM A

RAM RAM AM R R

R RAM RAM R ...

RAM RAM A RAM ...

RAM R RM RA R

R RAM RAM RAM A

RAM RAM M RAM A

RAM RAM M R A

RAM RAM M RAM A

R RAM M RAM A

RAM RAM A R A

R RAM A RAM ...

RAM RAM M RAM A

Montana ............. Nebraska ............. Nevada ................ New Hampshire . New Jersey ..........

RA RM R AM RAM

R R A R RM

... ... RA AM

A ... RAM AM AM

RA ... R AM R

RA R RAM RAM RAM

RA R RAM AM RA

RA ... RA AM R

RAM A RA RA RAM

RA M RAM AM RAM

RA M A A RM

R M R RAM RM

RA RM R AM RAM

New Mexico ........ New York ............ North Carolina ... North Dakota ..... Ohio ....................

RAM RAM AM RAM RA

RM R A RM RAM

RA ... ... ... ...

RA R R RAM ...

RA R ... R ...

RAM RAM A RA RAM

RM RAM AM RAM RAM

RM RAM AM RAM RAM

RA RAM RAM RAM RAM

RA RAM AM RA RAM

RAM M A RM RA

R RM ... R ...

RAM RAM AM RAM RA

Oklahoma ........... Oregon ................ Pennsylvania ...... Rhode Island ...... South Carolina ...

N.A. RA RAM RAM R

N.A. R RAM R A

N.A. ... RA R ...

N.A. R RAM R ...

N.A. ... R R R

N.A. RAM RAM RAM A

N.A. RAM RAM RAM R

N.A. RAM AM RAM A

N.A. RA R RA AM

N.A. RAM RAM R A

N.A. ... RAM R R

N.A. ... R R A

RA RAM RAM R

South Dakota ...... Tennessee ............ Texas ................... Utah .................... Vermont ..............

RAM RAM RA RAM AM

RAM R R RA RM

RAM R ... R RA

RAM RA RAM RAM RA

RAM ... R RA RAM

RAM R A R RAM

RAM R RA RAM RAM

RAM RAM RAM RAM RAM

RAM R RAM RA RA

RAM RAM R RAM RAM

RAM RAM ... RAM RAM

RAM ... RAM R RAM

RAM RAM RA RAM AM

Virginia ............... Washington ......... West Virginia ...... Wisconsin ........... Wyoming ............

AM A RA RAM RAM

AM R

RM

RAM

R

RA R

... ...

RA R A

R RAM R

AM RM RAM RA RA

AM M RAM RAM RA

RA M R RA RA

AM RAM RA RAM RA

AM RAM RA R RA

AM ... RA M ...

AM ... RA M RA

AM A RA RAM RAM

Dist. of Columbia Count* ..............................

RAM 46

RAM 42

R 23

RAM 41

R 36

R 46

RAM 46

RAM 45

RAM 45

A 45

RAM 41

RAM 37

RAM 46

Source: National Association of State Chief Information Officers. * Note: This figure represents the number of states responding affirmatively (i.e., R, A, or M) in each category. Key: R—Recommend agency practices. A—Approves agency practices.

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M—Manage for agencies. N.A. — Not available. . . .—Not applicable.

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RA RAM RAM RA RAM RAM RA RAM

RAM


INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Table B COMPOSITION OF IT GOVERNING BOARDS Number of representatives from each category State or other jurisdiction

Agency

Elected officials

Judicial branch

Legislative branch

Local government

Public education

Private sector

Other

CIO role on board

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. N.A. 4 ... 1 2 1 1 4 1 9 ... ... ... 1 ... ... 6 .................................Currently, there is no oversight board, but one is planned.................................

Chair or Leader N.A. Chair or Leader Member (voting) Chair or Leader

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

N.A. ... 2 N.A. ...

N.A. ... 1 N.A. ...

N.A. ... 1 N.A. 1

N.A. ... 1 N.A. 4

N.A. ... ... N.A. ...

N.A. ... ... N.A. ...

N.A. ... 4 N.A. 7

N.A. 1 ... N.A. ...

N.A. Chair or Leader Chair or Leader N.A. Other leadership role

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

16 3 N.A. N.A. 2

... 1 N.A. N.A. ...

1 1 N.A. N.A. 1

... 4 N.A. N.A. 4

... 1 N.A. N.A. ...

2 2 N.A. N.A. 1

... 2 N.A. N.A. 5

... 2 N.A. N.A. 1

Other leadership role Chair or Leader N.A. N.A. Advisory capacity only

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

4 9 12 N.A. ...

... 5 8 N.A. ...

2 1 1 N.A. ...

1 1 2 N.A. ...

2 1 ... N.A. ...

1 2 1 N.A. ...

3 ... 5 N.A. ...

4 2 1 N.A. ...

Member (voting) Chair or Leader Other leadership role Chair or Leader Other leadership role

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

1 19 11 ... 16

... ... ... ... 4

1 1 ... ... 2

3 3 ... 2 2

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

2 1 ... 5 ...

Other leadership role Chair or Leader Member (voting) Member (non-voting) Member (non-voting)

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

9 ... N.A. 7 4

1 1 N.A. ... ...

1 ... N.A. ... ...

3 ... N.A. 2 ...

2 1 N.A. 2 ...

2 2 N.A. ... ...

1 5 N.A. ... ...

... ... N.A. ... 3

Member (voting) Other leadership role Member (voting) Other leadership role Chair or Leader

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

4 ... 4 9 6

... ... ... 3 4

2 ... ... 1 1

2 ... ... 2 2

... ... ... ... ...

2 ... ... 1 ...

5 ... ... 2 ...

3 80 12 ... ...

Advisory capacity only Chair or Leader Other leadership role Chair or Leader Chair or Leader

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

N.A. ... 8 5 ...

N.A. ... ... 1 3

N.A. ... ... ... ...

N.A. ... ... 2 2

N.A. ... ... 2 ...

N.A. ... ... 3 ...

N.A. ... ... 3 ...

N.A. ... ... 2 ...

N.A. Other leadership role No data Chair or Leader Advisory capacity only

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

6 2 7 ... 7

... ... ... ... ...

... 1 ... ... ...

... 7 ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... 2 ... ... ...

2 3 3 ... ...

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

1 1 13 N.A. 6

... ... 6 N.A. 1

... 1 1 N.A. ...

1 4 1 N.A. ...

... ... ... N.A. ...

... 2 1 N.A. ...

8 2 ... N.A. 2

... 5 4 N.A. ...

Dist. of Columbia ............... Count* ...........................................................

... 30

... 13

... 19

... 23

... 9

... 14

... 16

... 21

Chair or Leader Other leadership role Other leadership role Other leadership role Chair or Leader Advisory capacity only Member (voting) Other leadership role Advisory capacity only Advisory capacity only Other leadership role

Source: National Association of Chief Information Officers. * Note: This total represents the number of states responding affirmatively in each category. . . . — Not applicable. N.A. — Not available.

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INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

Table C STATEWIDE IT PROCUREMENT RESPONSIBILITY State or other jurisdiction

Software

Services

Alabama ...................................................... Alaska .......................................................... Arizona ........................................................ Arkansas ..................................................... California ....................................................

Hardware Shared N.A. CPO Shared CPO

Shared N.A. CPO Shared CPO

ITO N.A. CPO Shared CPO

Colorado ..................................................... Connecticut ................................................. Delaware ..................................................... Florida ......................................................... Georgia ........................................................

N.A. ITO Shared ITO ITO

N.A. ITO Shared ITO ITO

N.A. ITO Shared ITO ITO

Hawaii ......................................................... Idaho ............................................................ Illinois .......................................................... Indiana ........................................................ Iowa .............................................................

Shared Shared N.A. N.A. ITO

Shared Shared N.A. N.A. ITO

Shared Shared N.A. N.A. ITO

Kansas ......................................................... Kentucky ..................................................... Louisiana .................................................... Maine ........................................................... Maryland ....................................................

Shared CPO CPO ITO Shared

Shared CPO CPO ITO Shared

Shared CPO CPO ITO Shared

Massachusetts ............................................ Michigan ..................................................... Minnesota ................................................... Mississippi .................................................. Missouri ......................................................

CPO Shared Shared ITO CPO

CPO Shared Shared ITO CPO

CPO Shared ITO ITO CPO

Montana ...................................................... Nebraska ..................................................... Nevada ......................................................... New Hampshire .......................................... New Jersey ..................................................

Shared Shared ITO CPO Shared

Shared Shared Shared CPO Shared

Shared No data ITO CPO Shared

New Mexico ................................................ New York ..................................................... North Carolina ........................................... North Dakota ............................................. Ohio .............................................................

Shared Shared ITO Shared ITO

Shared Shared ITO Shared ITO

Shared Shared ITO Shared ITO

Oklahoma ................................................... Oregon ......................................................... Pennsylvania .............................................. Rhode Island .............................................. South Carolina ...........................................

N.A. Shared CPO CPO Shared

N.A. Shared CPO CPO Shared

N.A. Shared ITO CPO Shared

South Dakota .............................................. Tennessee .................................................... Texas ............................................................ Utah ............................................................. Vermont ......................................................

Shared ITO ITO CPO Shared

Shared CPO ITO CPO Shared

Shared ITO ITO CPO Shared

Virginia ....................................................... Washington ................................................. West Virginia .............................................. Wisconsin .................................................... Wyoming .....................................................

ITO Shared Shared Shared CPO

ITO Shared Shared Shared CPO

ITO Shared Shared Shared CPO

Dist. of Columbia .......................................

Shared

Shared

Shared

Source: The National Association of State Chief Information Officers Key: ITO—IT Office/Department. CPO—Central Procurement Office. Shared—Shared responsibilities between ITO and CPO. N.A.—Not available.

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STATE LIBRARIES

Trends and Issues in State Libraries: Balancing Books and Bytes By Thomas J. Hennen Jr. Public libraries will continue to be buffeted by budget shortfalls at state and local levels. The rapid changes brought about by the Internet and electronic resources, as well as copyright, privacy issues, and censorship concerns, have presented major problems. Public libraries have adapted with new forms of service and new organizational structures.

No examination of the current and future status of library services can reasonably begin without noting this: library service in the United States is primarily a local affair. The federal and state governments provide funding and strategic planning, but, for the most part and in most states, public libraries are supported and governed locally. In many Western countries, the national government is much more directly involved in funding and governing library services. Andrew Carnegie’s gifts of millions of dollars for libraries in local communities at the beginning of the 20th century led U.S. public libraries to be far more local agencies than those found in many Western countries. The Carnegie grants encouraged local rather than district, regional or state library development. Wider units, on a county or regional basis, may have been wiser. That is something that even the Carnegie Endowment acknowledged, but libraries became and have mostly remained primarily local agencies.1 Copyright issues, especially the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA)2, have added problems for all types of libraries. Libraries cannot make information available to their constituents if copyright restrictions are too restrictive. The tug and pull of publishers and copyright holders on the one hand, and librarians and other advocates of open access to information on the other hand will be a continuing trend. Nancy Kranich’s paper on the Information Commons3 does a remarkable job of illustrating the issues involved. Although libraries are local agencies, the federal government continues to play a key role in setting the stage for library services. Each of the 50 states plays a commensurate role as well, as the next section demonstrates.

State Library Agencies State library agencies vary throughout the United States, both in placement within the state govern-

ment structure and in authority or funding ability. In some states, the state library agency runs an actual library with a collection and a building that everyone recognizes as “the state library.” New York and Illinois are examples. The collection usually includes state documents and historical items as well as research items for the legislature and the public. In other states, like Minnesota, there is no state library building or collection and the agency is involved only in planning and distribution of funding. The funding configurations also vary widely. Hawaii runs all libraries as a single system and Ohio provides the majority of funding for public libraries, but these are exceptions to the rule. A few other states, Mississippi, Pennsylvania and West Virginia, provide more than 20 percent of local library operating funds. The majority of states provide 5 percent or less of local library revenue. Many library agency operations are largely or completely funded by federal grants while they distribute state and/or federal funds to libraries. Most work on state legislation, literacy efforts, public relations, and provide for the smooth operation of interlibrary lending of materials. A few are involved with archives and state records. A few others provide certification programs for library staff and/or libraries.

Emerging Trends in State Library Operations The most significant emerging trends for state library agencies are their involvement in full text databases, electronic network development, and massive budget cutting. Many believe that everything on the Internet is free for the taking, but that is far from the truth. Full text databases are an example of an expensive resource that libraries provide. Full text databases are electronic databases that provide the full text of periodical and journal articles online. Users can read the article, print off a copy, or e-mail the text. DependThe Council of State Governments

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STATE LIBRARIES

Table A: Types of Public Library Organization in the U.S.: 2003 Type of library organization

Number of states with this library type

Number ............................... Municipal ............................

44

County/parish ....................

38

Multi-jurisdictional ...........

27

Special district ...................

21

Non-profit/agency ..............

17

City-county .........................

16

Miscellaneous .....................

12

School district ....................

8

Indian or tribal ..................

7

States with this type All but: Ga., Hawaii, Ind., Ky., Md., Penn., Wyo. All but: Conn., D.C., Hawaii, Idaho, Ill., Ind., Maine, Mass., N.H., Penn., R.I., Vt., Wash. Ala., Alaska, Ark., Calif., Colo., Fla., Ga., Ind., Kan., Ky., La., Minn., Miss., Mo., Mont., N.H., N.J., N.M., N.C., N.D., Okla., S.D., Texas, Vt., Va., W.Va., Wis. Ala., Ariz., Calif., Colo., Del., Fla., Idaho, Ill., Ind., Kan., Ky., La., Mich., Nev., N.M., N.Y., Ore., S.D., Texas, Vt., Wash. Alaska, Conn., Maine, Mass., N.H., N.J., N.M., N.Y., N.C., Ohio, Ore., Penn., R.I., S.D., Texas, Vt., Va. Ala., Ark., Calif., Colo., Fla., La., Minn., Miss., Mo., Mont., N.C., N.D., S.D., Tenn., Texas, Utah Ark., Hawaii, Iowa, Kan., Mass., Neb., N.M., N.Y., N.C., Penn., S.D., Texas Calif., Colo., Mich., N.Y., Ohio, Ore., W.Va, Wis. Alaska, Ariz., N.J., N.M., N.Y., S.D, Wis.

Total/average ......................

Percent of all U.S. libraries

Percent of U.S. population served

Total library expenditures

Per capita expenditures

9,138 54.2%

277,362,711 33.4%

$8,026,123,397 34.51%

$28.44

10.4

33.6

31.58

29.91

3.5

8.8

5.56

17.18

11.2

10.6

12.54

34.39

14.9

6.9

6.76

23.5

1

2.9

2.72

26.94

1

1.2

0.99

18.38

3.4

2.6

5.29

59.40

0.4

0.1

0.05

27.17

100.00%

100.00%

100.00%

$28.94

Source: Federal State Cooperative Service Data and Hennen’s American Public Library Ratings.

ing on the publisher and the licensing arrangement, graphics or photos are sometimes included. Almost all states have entered into financial contracts with database providers to provide database content to state users, often at home as well as in the library. Individual libraries and cooperative library systems often supplement databases that are available statewide with ones that are specific to a geographic area. The provision of full text databases by states, regions and local libraries is a trend that is likely to accelerate as budgets become constrained and publishers learn to gauge the market better. In a budget pinch, libraries are increasingly deciding to drop print journals in favor of their electronic counterparts. Nearly all state library agencies plan for electronic and Internet connections. The federal e-rate program advanced interest in network development. Highspeed Internet connections are used for Web connections, circulation systems, video conferencing and much more, so it is no surprise that state library agencies have taken the lead in developing these networks on a statewide basis. In the recent budget cutting that has engulfed most states, state governments have cut state library agencies at roughly the same rate as most other state pro490

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grams. In some states, such as California, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Massachusetts, Minnesota and Washington, the cuts have been significantly higher. Public libraries are often granted state aid, provided grant money, and subjected to certification and standards by state library agencies, so the health of the state’s funding is important to them, even when most of their direct funding is provided locally, usually by property taxes. Among the major threats in the near term for libraries are public library dependence on state funding for all or most of their full text databases and library dependence on the state’s Internet backbone for their Internet and circulation system connections. In the context of state budget cuts nationwide, this dependence causes vulnerabilities. The threat is all the more serious, of course, in those states that have a substantial state aid cash grant program for public libraries.

Legislative Implications Since the beginning of the Clinton administration, a main thrust of the federal government has been to connect school and public libraries to the Internet. This goal has been largely achieved by using e-rate funds. These grants are generated by Universal Ser-

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STATE LIBRARIES

Table B: 2003 Average Library Revenue Per Capita in the 50 States Ratio

2003 public library revenue per capita State

Local

State

Federal

Other

Total

Local

State

Alabama ..................... Alaska ......................... Arizona ....................... Arkansas .................... California ...................

$13.61 33.03 22.23 13.94 23.41

$0.95 1.41 0.11 0.47 2.06

$0.10 1.43 0.14 0.00 0.09

$1.31 1.63 0.53 1.19 1.85

$15.98 37.50 23.01 15.60 27.41

Federal

Other

85.2% 88.1 96.6 89.3 85.4

6.0% 3.8 0.5 3.0 7.5

0.7% 3.8 0.6 0.0 0.3

8.2% 4.3 2.3 7.7 6.7

Colorado .................... Connecticut ................ Delaware .................... Florida ........................ Georgia .......................

38.67 36.33 16.04 21.99 14.69

0.51 0.50 3.54 2.05 3.72

0.04 0.36 0.15 0.21 0.20

2.92 7.16 2.67 1.13 0.99

42.14 44.34 22.40 25.37 19.59

91.8 91.9 71.6 86.7 75.0

1.2 1.1 15.8 8.1 19.0

0.1 0.8 0.7 0.8 1.0

6.9 16.1 11.9 4.4 5.1

Hawaii ........................ Idaho ........................... Illinois ......................... Indiana ....................... Iowa ............................

0.00 19.95 43.26 39.77 23.25

18.50 0.66 3.36 3.38 0.76

0.45 0.15 0.28 0.11 0.15

1.76 2.61 4.37 2.28 2.24

20.71 23.38 51.28 45.55 26.40

0.0 85.3 84.4 87.3 88.1

89.3 2.8 6.6 7.4 2.9

2.2 0.7 0.6 0.2 0.6

8.5 11.2 8.5 5.0 8.5

Kansas ........................ Kentucky .................... Louisiana ................... Maine .......................... Maryland ...................

31.46 18.61 24.08 18.28 25.52

0.83 0.99 1.52 0.15 5.03

0.18 0.11 0.02 0.00 0.38

4.57 1.96 1.60 6.42 5.99

37.04 21.67 27.22 24.85 36.92

84.9 85.9 88.5 73.6 69.1

2.2 4.5 5.6 0.6 13.6

0.5 0.5 0.1 0.0 1.0

12.3 9.1 5.9 25.8 16.2

Massachusetts ........... Michigan .................... Minnesota .................. Mississippi ................. Missouri .....................

29.96 29.96 28.29 9.81 27.18

3.22 1.22 1.65 2.64 0.97

0.27 0.05 0.21 0.24 0.33

4.19 2.59 1.96 1.02 2.81

37.64 33.81 32.12 13.72 31.28

79.6 88.6 88.1 71.5 86.9

8.6 3.6 5.1 19.3 3.1

0.7 0.1 0.7 1.8 1.0

11.1 7.6 6.1 7.4 9.0

Montana ..................... Nebraska .................... Nevada ........................ New Hampshire ......... New Jersey .................

15.88 26.20 19.95 26.65 36.89

0.42 0.33 0.64 0.07 1.16

0.08 0.24 0.27 0.02 0.15

4.54 1.53 8.52 3.13 2.08

20.92 28.30 29.38 29.88 40.28

75.9 92.6 67.9 89.2 91.6

2.0 1.2 2.2 0.2 2.9

0.4 0.9 0.9 0.1 0.4

21.7 5.4 29.0 10.5 5.2

New Mexico ............... New York .................... North Carolina .......... North Dakota ............ Ohio ............................

16.38 36.50 15.66 13.21 11.30

0.29 2.65 1.73 1.07 40.44

0.16 0.32 0.13 0.03 0.08

0.97 7.27 1.43 2.34 5.03

17.80 46.74 18.96 16.64 56.85

92.0 78.1 82.6 79.4 19.9

1.6 5.7 9.1 6.4 71.1

0.9 0.7 0.7 0.2 0.1

5.5 15.6 7.6 14.1 8.8

Oklahoma .................. Oregon ........................ Pennsylvania ............. Rhode Island ............. South Carolina ..........

21.26 35.23 13.73 23.19 16.99

0.64 0.22 7.04 6.05 1.47

0.09 0.35 0.27 0.25 0.15

1.46 2.40 3.37 8.57 1.00

23.45 38.19 24.41 38.06 19.61

90.7 92.2 56.3 60.9 86.7

2.7 0.6 28.8 15.9 7.5

0.4 0.9 1.1 0.7 0.8

6.2 6.3 13.8 22.5 5.1

South Dakota ............. Tennessee ................... Texas ........................... Utah ............................ Vermont .....................

26.06 13.26 16.36 26.00 16.65

0.00 0.00 0.28 0.40 0.03

0.18 0.10 0.14 0.11 0.00

2.30 1.00 0.65 1.41 7.07

28.54 14.36 17.42 27.90 23.75

91.3 92.3 93.9 93.2 70.1

0.0 0.0 1.6 1.4 0.1

0.6 0.7 0.8 0.4 0.0

8.0 7.0 3.7 5.0 29.8

Virginia ...................... Washington ................ West Virginia ............. Wisconsin ................... Wyoming ....................

24.17 38.78 8.72 29.20 32.54

2.88 0.27 5.04 0.89 0.01

0.18 0.16 0.07 0.11 0.18

1.54 1.64 1.24 2.13 2.21

28.77 40.86 15.07 32.32 34.95

84.0 94.9 57.9 90.3 93.1

10.0 0.7 33.4 2.7 0.0

0.6 0.4 0.5 0.3 0.5

5.4 5.0 8.2 6.6 6.3

Average .......................

24.45

3.62

0.17

2.69

30.93

79.0

11.7

0.6

8.7

Source: Federal State Cooperative Service and haplr-index.com.

vice Fund charges on consumer phone bills. Many school and public libraries receive substantial portions of their Internet connections from e-rate funds. The funding is targeted to communities with the least local financial resources. Recent federal legislation called the Child Internet Protection Act (CIPA)4 limited e-rate funds to those libraries that use Internet

filters to limit access to pornography and inappropriate materials. The American Library Association and many local public libraries challenged CIPA in court on the grounds that the filters failed to work properly, often letting pornographic material through while restricting access to needed information. The Supreme Court The Council of State Governments

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STATE LIBRARIES ultimately ruled the legislation constitutional but noted that libraries needed to be in a position to turn off the filters if adults so requested. An ironic result of the distribution formula for erate funds has been that libraries in wealthier communities have often found it is less expensive to forgo e-rate funds than to buy filters, while poorer communities have found themselves forced to provide filters. Since the attacks of 9/11, the Patriot Act has added new issues for all types of libraries. Most states have existing privacy laws that prohibit the disclosure of library use records without a court order. The Patriot Act provides for disclosure with a far lower threshold, and many librarians have found this troublesome. The American Library Association resisted the provisions and called for their removal, citing constitutional and civil liberties issues. Former Attorney General Ashcroft maintained that the Patriot Act provisions had never been used in a library setting, a contention disputed by some librarians. Some members of Congress have tried to modify these provisions. It is likely that the debate will continue at both state and federal levels.5 Given the environment at the federal level with the Patriot Act and CIPA, state policy-makers should expect increasing challenges to privacy and free speech issues that may be at odds with existing state law. In some states, legislators have already proposed the requirement of Internet filters as a condition of state funding along the lines of the federal CIPA law. Policy-makers can expect resistance from free speech advocates. No filter companies can guarantee that their products work effectively 100 percent of the time. Many librarians charged that they either “over block,” blocking useful materials that is not pornographic, or “under block,” failing to block objectionable material, or usually both. Policy-makers should not expect the censorship attempts to be limited to internet sources alone, of course. Videos, music CDs and, of course, print materials, will continue to be challenged both at the local and state levels. State library agencies and all the library literature urge libraries to have a written and specific materials selection policy and a process for re-consideration. Most states have laws giving library boards broad discretion in discharging their duties in conformance with local community standards, but state and federal changes are continuous. A 2004 election driven by values can be expected to drive further censorship/ free speech legislation to the forefront. States that do not have district laws on the books 492

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(see Table A) will want to consider writing them. The increased interest by local and state lawmakers in regional cooperation will fuel the trend. In fact, using Table A, policy-makers may want to consider whether forms of library operations of all kinds that are available in other states would be appropriate to their own. Some have made the case that the formation of special districts for libraries runs a major public policy risk. Popular items like parks and libraries in “a la carte” districts can soak up public funds. That leaves less for important but non-attractive government functions like accounting or road building. The converse of this argument is that too often local government officials use the very popularity of library services to their own detriment. City mayors have used this strategy in local budget battles: threatening to close a branch library causes city council members to rally to the defense of their branches and voila—the budget is restored. Wireless access points or “hot spots” are growing in popularity at airports, restaurants and libraries. Recent efforts in Philadelphia to make the entire city wireless ran into resistance from the private sector phone and cable distributors. Comparable arguments may arise over taxpayer supported, but free to the user, library wireless. Policy-makers should also expect issues to arise over libraries and communities providing their own wiring for Internet and telecommunications infrastructure rather than buying the services from a phone or cable company. A review of existing state statutes for libraries will usually uncover the need to establish new enabling legislation, re-consider funding formulas, and examine privacy and censorship issues.

Countercyclical Business Public libraries are a traditionally counter-cyclical business. Library use increases when the economy sours, but as the economy gets worse, funding falls. By the time the economy recovers, library budget cuts have usually diminished libraries’ resources so dramatically that many users in an expanding economy go elsewhere for service— only to return when the economy sours again. A recent study by the American Library Association re-affirmed the connection between the business cycle and library use. 6 The budget problems in most states are causing problems for many libraries, of course, but the impact varies by the type of library program in a state. In late 2004 there were threats to close libraries com-

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STATE LIBRARIES pletely in several areas of the country. Buffalo and Erie County Library in New Table C: Library Visits and Library Spending York was among the most prominent of Per Capita in the 50 States the threatened closures.7 Because Colorado passed a constitutional limit on taxes Spending Visits Spending Visit called TABOR,8 libraries there have been State per capita per capita rank rank especially hard hit. Denver Public Library Alabama .............................. $15.68 3.0 46 47 has slashed service radically and is atAlaska .................................. 36.35 4.4 10 29 Arizona ................................ 22.11 3.7 34 38 tempting to establish itself as an indepenArkansas ............................. 13.75 2.9 49 49 dent library-taxing district. California ............................ 25.38 4.1 26 32 Faced with large budget cuts from Ohio Colorado ............................. 38.21 5.8 9 7 Connecticut ......................... 40.93 6.5 5 2 state funding, the Cuyahoga County treaDelaware ............................. 19.87 3.7 37 37 surer is calling for consolidation of the Florida ................................. 22.92 4.0 32 34 Georgia ................................ 19.13 3.3 39 43 county library system with the seven inHawaii ................................. 20.52 4.6 36 26 dependent libraries in the county, includIdaho .................................... 22.85 5.8 33 6 Illinois .................................. 41.03 5.5 4 13 ing Cleveland. Similar calls for consoliIndiana ................................ 42.41 6.3 3 3 dation and wider units were heard recently Iowa ..................................... 25.51 5.3 25 15 in Broome County, New York; Scott Kansas ................................. 36.14 5.8 11 8 Kentucky ............................. 19.00 3.6 40 39 County, Iowa; and Waukesha and MilLouisiana ............................ 23.20 2.9 31 48 waukee Counties in Wisconsin. Calls to Maine ................................... 24.36 5.0 29 22 Maryland ............................ 35.19 5.2 14 18 consolidate or form separate taxing disMassachusetts .................... 35.71 5.5 12 14 tricts are likely to increase in the near fuMichigan ............................. 29.75 4.1 18 33 ture, driven by budget problems and deMinnesota ........................... 31.45 5.2 16 16 Mississippi .......................... 13.14 2.8 50 50 sires for efficiencies. Missouri .............................. 27.56 4.5 22 27 The fastest growing type of public liMontana .............................. 16.62 4.0 44 35 brary in the United States is the district Nebraska ............................. 26.45 5.2 24 19 Nevada ................................. 26.79 4.1 23 31 library, a wider unit of service, often with New Hampshire .................. 28.93 4.7 19 24 elected boards and taxing authority. Only New Jersey .......................... 39.02 5.1 7 20 40 percent of states provide for this type New Mexico ........................ 18.32 3.3 41 44 New York ............................. 44.65 5.7 2 11 of service, however. Support for public North Carolina ................... 18.03 3.8 42 36 libraries by the public at large is very high, 16.16 4.2 45 30 North Dakota ..................... Ohio ..................................... 53.93 6.9 1 1 even in a recessionary environment. LiOklahoma ........................... 21.28 4.7 35 25 brary Journal and American Libraries Oregon ................................. 38.94 5.9 8 4 publish referendum reports annually. Pennsylvania ...................... 24.18 3.4 30 41 Rhode Island ...................... 35.27 4.7 13 10 These referenda are for new buildings, South Carolina ................... 19.38 3.5 38 40 higher rate authorizations, and so forth. South Dakota ...................... 24.74 5.9 27 5 The 2004 reports saw only a 50 percent Tennessee ............................ 14.17 3.1 47 45 Texas .................................... 16.69 3.0 43 46 success rate and this is very low by hisUtah ..................................... 28.08 5.0 21 21 toric standards. In recent years, the sucVermont .............................. 24.38 5.2 28 17 cess rate for library referenda has usually Virginia ............................... 28.28 4.5 20 28 Washington ......................... 39.87 4.8 6 23 been closer to 85 percent. In fact, one of West Virginia ...................... 13.93 3.4 48 42 the reasons that some local officials opWisconsin ............................ 31.30 5.7 17 9 Wyoming ............................. 32.81 5.6 15 12 pose the development of separate library Average ................................ 28.94 4.5 districts is the very popularity of librarSource: Federal State Cooperative Service and haplr-index.com. ies. A competing but more popular taxing authority is threatening to them. Some elected officials and members of the public For the next decade, public libraries will be challenged with the need to “balance the books and the believe that since the Internet is now so pervasive and bytes.” Traditional library users expect print materi- easy to use, the need for libraries is rapidly diminishals and readers’ advisory assistance in a comfortable ing. In just 15 years, the Internet has gone from being a environment while new users expect the library to tool for researchers to a ubiquitous technology. In 1994, provide high speed, wireless Internet access, and the only one in 10 library systems provided Internet access. By 2004, the score was virtually 100 percent. latest in technological services. The Council of State Governments

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STATE LIBRARIES As Table C demonstrates, there is a very high correlation between the amount spent for library services on a per capita basis and the visits to libraries. Policy-makers must balance the public response with its willingness to pay. Public libraries are seeing increasing challenges from all sides on the electronic information front. Each new medium presents librarians and policymakers with a new set of questions about how the medium can or should be integrated into the public library service profile. Many still question the validity of video in public libraries, arguing that they are entertainment only and compete with private business. Comparable arguments can and will be advanced regarding MP3s, of course. Virtual reference is an attempt by libraries to provide online, real time answers to library user questions on the Internet. It is possible to provide 24/7 services by sharing librarians around various time zones. The trend towards digital preservation will undoubtedly continue. Many public libraries have unique local resources that can be preserved through digitization and placement on the Web. The costs are high and the technology changes rapidly. Public librarians believe in libraries as public goods. Many fear the increasing commoditization of all forms of information from the for profit sector. This has led many to call for the libraries to be part of an “information commons.” The stress lines between the information commons and libraries as a public good on the one hand and profit-making inclinations of the information industry on the other, will engender much conflict that legislators at the state as well as federal levels will be called on to resolve in the next decade.

Notes 1 A discussion of the relationship of Carnegie library grants as well as the federal government role in library development can be found in Chapter 3 of Civic Space/ cyberspace: The American Public Library in the Information Age, .By Redmond Kathleen Molz. 2 The American Library Association provides balanced information on the DMCA on its Web site at: http:// www.ala.org/ala/washoff/WOissues/copyrightb/dmca/ guidedmca.htm. 3 The Information Commons: A Public Policy Report Free Expression Policy Project is available on the Web at: http:/ /www.fepproject.org/policyreports/infocommons.content sexsum.html. 4 Information on CIPA is available from a number of

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sources, including the American Library Association Web site at: http://www.ala.org/ala/washoff/WOissues/ civilliberties/cipaweb/cipa.htm. 5 The American Library Association provides balanced information on the Patriot Act on its Web site at: http:// www.ala.org/ala/oif/ifissues/usapatriotact.htm. 6 The American Library Association Study of the relationship between library use and the economic cycle is available on the Web at: http://www.wcfls.lib.wi.us/ libstudies_pdf/ALALibraryUseData.pdf . 7 “Buffalo Library System Saved, But Must Retrench,” Library Journal, Dec. 13, 2004. http://www.libraryjournal .com/article/CA487351?display =breakingNews. 8 TABOR is an acronym for the Taxpayer Bill of Rights. It passed in Colorado in 1992 and has had an impact on government spending throughout the state.

References de la Peña McCook, Kathleen. Introduction to Public Librarianship. New York, NY: Neal-Schuman. 2004. Hennen, Thomas J. Jr. Hennen’s Public Library Planner: A Manual and Interactive CD-ROM. New York: NealSchuman, 2004 . Kranich, Nancy. The Information Commons: A Public Policy Report. Free Expression Policy Project. http:// www.fepproject.org/policyreports/infocommons. contentsexsum.html. McCabe, Ronald B. Civic Librarianship: Renewing the Social Mission of the Public Library, Scarecrow Press, 2001. Molz, Redmond Kathleen, and Dain, Phyl. Civic Space/ cyberspace: The American Public Library in the Information Age. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1999.

Agencies ALA—American Library Association: www.ala.org COSLA—Council of State Library Agencies: www.cosla.org/profiles FSCS—Federal State Cooperative Service: nces.ed.gov/ surveys/libraries/FSCS.asp HAPLR—Hennen’s American Public Library Ratings: www.haplr-index.com NCLIS—National Council on Libraries and Information Services: www.nclis.gov/index.cfm NCES—National Commission on Educational Statistics: www.nclis.gov/statsurv/NCES/index.html

About the Author Thomas J. Hennen Jr. is director of the Waukesha County Federated Library System in Wisconsin. He is the creator of the HAPLR Library Ratings (www.haplrindex.com), and author of Hennen’s Public Library Planner (Neal-Schuman, 2004).

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Professional Licensing By Pam Brinegar In an effort to contain costs while also providing better consumer service, government agencies throughout North America are developing business plans and restructuring professional and occupational regulatory agencies. Increased technology use is bringing new security problems along with enhanced access for all stakeholders. The professional licensing stakeholder community is expanding to include international regulators. State professional licensing agencies are charged with protecting consumers from harm resulting from illegal or incompetent practitioner acts. They carry out their mission by ensuring that candidates for professional and occupational licensure, certification or registration meet all criteria mandated through statutes and regulations. 1 The agencies also renew licenses and administer continuing education and professional discipline programs. This context is expanding to include other countries where the system of professional licensing is most like that found in the United States (e.g., Western Europe, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and some Pacific Rim countries).

Agency Consolidation In the late 1970s and early 1980s, there was a legislative trend to centralize state agencies based on statutory mission. As a result, most professions and occupations in 37 states and the District of Columbia are regulated by central agencies that share varying degrees of administrative tasks with the licensing boards. Some states (e.g. Indiana, Virginia, Washington) established two licensing agencies, one for regulation of health professions, and another for non-health. 2 Agency consolidation is again occurring among the states, sometimes on a fairly large scale. In Illinois, the new Department of Financial and Professional Regulation (DFPR) combines the Departments of Professional Regulation, Insurance and Financial Institutions with the Offices of Banks and Real Estate. In Texas, 12 agencies are now combining into four departments under the Health and Human Services Commission. A proposed California reform would eliminate 118 boards and commissions, placing their functions in a Division of Commercial Licensing.3 One rationale for these agency restructurings is the presumed efficiency of grouping together all similar functions. Such agencies are considered not only less costly to operate, but much better providers of consumer service. For example, Oregon Business Plan’s Objective 3 is to streamline regulatory processes and systems, with a focus on permits for de-

velopment, regulation and registration of new businesses, and regulations that overlap between state agencies or between the state and local government.4 The Oregon Office of Regulatory Streamlining claims “the nation’s most comprehensive directory of state licenses, permits, registrations, certificates, authorizations, and charters.”5

Professional Discipline Every state has an administrative procedures act based in large part on the 1981 model act developed by the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws (NCCUSL) that prescribes, among other things, disciplinary process.6 Professional discipline is enormously costly, sometimes consuming up to 50 percent of an agency’s resources. Agencies use increasingly efficient methods to handle their investigative case loads, such as permitting staff to handle minor complaints rather than involving the board or by employing alternative dispute resolution techniques, such as mediation, to reach a fairly rapid resolution for lesser offenses. No matter which approach is used, it is admittedly difficult to ensure that professional discipline is administered in a uniform and fair manner. To introduce impartiality into the process, the Virginia Department of Health Professions has launched the first sanction reference point system for regulatory disciplinary cases. Using a point system developed from its own history of disciplinary actions over a six-year period, the Board of Medicine is the first of the state’s boards to use the new method. All Virginia health licensing boards will eventually use the system, as reference points are developed based on the history of each board.7

Technology The use of modern technology is now pervasive in professional regulation, supporting professional development, credentialing (licensing), service delivery and demonstration of continued competence. Now that candidates can prepare for and take their The Council of State Governments

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LICENSURE licensing examinations as well as apply for and renew their licenses online, security concerns are changing as well. Providers of computer based testing (CBT) find they must routinely check online discussion groups and other resources in an effort to detect security breeches.8 Advantages of using CBT include candidate opportunities for continuous (or at least greatly expanded) access to licensing examinations, immediate scoring results, and the ability to generate varying versions of an examination.

Continuing Competence Practitioner continuing competence remains a critical issue facing regulatory bodies. States frequently require mandatory continuing education programs designed to ensure that licensees maintain a level of minimally acceptable competence; however, initial licensure is typically granted for generic skills in a given profession or occupation. Depending on what tasks practitioners actually perform on a daily basis, state-mandated continuing education programs may or may not provide appropriate instruction for their individual competency needs. For that reason, there is a growing interest in requiring some additional demonstration of competence. In Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia and New Zealand, it is now common for licensed health professionals to submit self-assessment tools such as practice portfolios that describe in detail their actual professional practice activities and propose individualized plans for remaining competent to practice. Although this system is based on the belief that it is up to professionals to maintain an appropriate level of competence, the ultimate responsibility for approving the proposed educational plans and for auditing randomly selected licensees in the workplace resides with the regulatory body. Online competence assessment resources are helping licensees learn to comply with the higher standards. For example, The Irish Nursing Board (an Board Altranais) provides an interactive e-learning center permitting its licensees the opportunity for peer-to-peer exchanges regarding competence as well as to review examples of actual competency assessment documents.9 The Mexican secretariat of education has established an Advisory Board for Professional Certification which is working toward the development of a national quality assurance system for the professions. Extraordinary features of this National System of Certification will include voluntary periodic recertification for both the certifying bodies and the professionals.10 496

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Federal Initiatives Federal activities bearing on professional licensing are often far-reaching and may take decades to fully implement. Three of these will likely receive increasing attention during the upcoming months. Americans with Disabilities Act The Americans With Disabilities Act (ADA) of 1990 “requires that credentialing agencies provide access to examination administration facilities, administer examinations for disabled candidates as often and in as timely a manner as examinations for nondisabled candidates, and provide examinations whose results measure candidates’ level of knowledge and skill rather than their disabilities.”11 How the ADA should apply to individual candidates is still being worked out through state regulations and the courts. Antitrust and the FTC Twenty-five years ago, the Federal Trade Commission won its first antitrust case removing barriers to the competitive advertising of professional services. Such activity was considered unethical by physicians, attorneys and others since it was widely assumed that consumers who used the services of those advertising lower prices would unknowingly receive lower quality services. Five years ago the U.S. Supreme Court expressed discomfort with “permitting the market to operate in the ‘learned professions,’ including its own.” A recent survey concludes that permitting such competition “yields major benefits to consumers in the form of lower prices, without adverse effects on quality.” 12 Trade Agreements Services, including the professions and occupations, continue to represent the fastest growing global economy and, since 2000, have been included in multilateral trade negotiations for the General Agreement on Trade in Services which is under the supervision of the World Trade Organization . The North American Free Trade Agreement also provides a structure through which individual professions and their regulatory bodies may reach agreement on the terms for mutual recognition of professional credentials. Under both treaties, agreements reached between countries are not binding on the states in the United States, which receive the agreement terms in the form of recommendations and which they individually may or may not incorporate into their statutes or regulations.13 The European Parliament is finalizing a Directive on Services in the Internal Market which provides a

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LICENSURE legal framework for the removal of unnecessary barriers to trade across the European member states.14 Those American professionals who are licensed in any member state of the European Union stand to benefit under the proposed directive; however, there likely will be unequal treatment in their instance since the United States is unable to enforce any mutual recognition agreement because of states rights.15

Domestic Professional Mobility As professional mobility is facilitated among other western countries, decades-old questions are resurfacing about why, if the function of state professional regulation is to protect the consumer, there are such varying standards among the states in America. It bears repeating that of the almost 1,000 professions regulated by the states, only a few dozen are regulated by all the states. Even for the most established of those few dozen, including such professions as nursing, medicine and engineering, individuals licensed to practice in any one state cannot practice in another without meeting different standards. Some reciprocity and endorsement agreements exist between states, but it is not a simple matter for a state to accept the standards established by another state. In the late 1970s, Shimberg and Roederer pointed out that no consumer group has ever sought licensing for regulation, but that the push for regulation comes from the practitioners of a profession.16 Why then do the professions that sought and gained state licensure not push for harmonization of state requirements? Sometimes they do, but it takes time and resources. Almost a decade ago, the National Council of State Boards of Nursing (NCSBN) began discussing a process for an interstate nurse licensure compact which would permit licensed nurses to practice in U.S. jurisdictions without meeting a variety of differing licensure requirements. The first nursing board agreed to participate in 2000 and, following a dedicated and determined effort on NCSBN’s part, the number of participating agencies is now 20. The reluctance of many state regulators to participate in such compacts is based in part on concerns about how to effectively identify and discipline those relatively few licensees who do present a real threat to the consumer and who may gain the ability to move around more quickly in the states than the system can follow them. Notes 1 Licensure, the most restrictive form of state regulation, specifies that it is illegal to practice a state-licensed profession without meeting state-defined standards, usually consisting of at least educational and additional examina-

tion requirements. No one without a license may practice the profession as defined in a scope-of-practice act. Certification, also known as title protection, may use requirements similar to those for licensure, but it does not prevent individuals from performing the tasks of the profession as long as they do not use the regulated title. The term certification is widely used in the private sector as well, which is a source of considerable confusion not only for consumers, but for those involved with state and voluntary certification programs as well. Registration, the least restrictive form of state regulation, usually consists of little more than requiring individuals to file their names, addresses and qualifications with a designated state agency before performing the duties of the occupation. There are several good primers on how professional and occupational licensing agencies are structured and what basic functions they perform. See for example Schmitt, K. and Shimberg, B., Demystifying Occupational and Professional Regulation: Answers to Questions You May Have Been Afraid to Ask, (Lexington, KY, The Council on Licensure, Enforcement and Regulation, 1996). 2 Agency stakeholders include consumers, other professional and occupational regulatory agencies, the federal government, national associations of state and provincial boards, national professional associations, examination companies, other corporate interests, professional and occupational educators, voluntary (private) certifiers, legislators/legislative staffers, third-party reimbursors, legal system (civil and criminal), educational/facility accreditation, counties/municipalities, marketplace tensions among all stakeholders. In particular, the relationship between educational institutions and regulators is not an easy one. Accrediting organizations help academic institutions develop curriculum content, while psychometricians conduct practice analyses to help licensing agencies determine the content of licensing examinations (J. Cote, “The Role of Accreditation in Licensure,” Amelia Island, FL, Federation of Associations of Regulatory Boards Forum 2004). 3 “Agency Consolidation is in the Air (Again),” CLEAR News, (Lexington, KY: Fall 2004) http://www.clearhq.org/ fall_news_04_Consolidation.htm. 4 http://www.oregonbusinessplan.org/regulatory _streamlining_objective3.html. 5 http://lic.oregon.gov/cfmx/lic/index.cfm. 6 An NCCUSL administrative procedures act revision draft was made available in November 2004, http:// www.law.upenn.edu/bll/ulc/msapa/Nov2004Draft.htm. 7 Virginia Department of Health Professions, Sanctioning Reference Points Instruction Manual, Board of Medicine, (Richmond, VA, 2004). http://www.dhp.virginia.gov/ medicine/guidelines/85-11%20SRP%20BOM%20 MANUAL%20JULY%202004.pdf. 8 Sandy Greenberg,“Testing Across the Nation: Security Concerns—Perceived and Real,” CLEAR Exam Review, Winter 2004. 9 http://www.nursingboard.ie/elearning/Competency/ html/orientation.htm. 10 V.E. Beltran Corona, “International Negotiations of Professional Services in Mexico,”(Kansas City, Missouri, September 29, 2004). http://www.clearhq.org/Beltran_2004.PDF.

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LICENSURE 11 The Council on Licensure, Enforcement and Regulation, The Americans With Disabilities Act: Information for Credentialing Examinations, (Lexington, KY: CLEAR, 2004). 12 J. Kwoka, “The Federal Trade Commission and the Professions: A Quarter Century of Accomplishment and Some New Challenges,” September 2004 (Washington, DC, America Antitrust Institute working paper #04-04), http://www.antitrustinstitute.org/recent2/354.pdf. Publicly and privately credentialed professions subject to FTC antitrust action 1981 to date are accountants, anesthesiologists, arbitrators, automotive dealers, bid depositories, chiropractors, customs brokers, dentists, dermatologists, doctors, engineers (various), fashion designers, hotel associations, interpreters, language specialists, lawyers, movers (various), music dealers, obstetricians, optometrists, orthopedists, osteopathic physicians, pharmacists, physical therapists, podiatrists, psychologists, real estate agency, veterinarians. 13 Some professions (notably accountants, architects, engineers, educator and attorneys) have worked with the World Trade Organization (WTO) and the Office of the United States Trade Representative to enter into or plan for agreements intended to facilitate mutual recognition of licensees among member countries. The WTO oversees the General Agreement on Trade in Services (GATS) which permits mutual recognition either through a harmonization of local regulations or direct agreement between member countries.

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14 http://www.europa.eu.int/cgi-bin/eur-lex/udl.pl? REQUEST=Service-Search&LANGUAGE=en&GUILAN GUAGE=en&SERVICE =all&COLLECTION=com& DOCID=504PC0002. 15 B. Ascher, “Toward a Borderless Market for Professional Services,” (Washington, D.C.: American Antitrust Institute, April 2004). http://www.antitrustinstitute.org/recent2/316.cfm. 16 B. Shimberg and D. Roederer, Questions a Legislator Should Ask. 2d., K. Schmitt, ed., (Lexington, KY, The Council on Licensure, Enforcement and Regulation, 1994). This influential pamphlet says that regulation should meet a public need, provide the minimum amount of oversight to meet that need, avoid overlap with other regulated services, provide for continued competence and professional discipline, and involve the public in the process. In other words, it educated legislators to understand that the only valid reason to regulate a profession is to protect consumers from any harm they may experience as a result of practice of the profession or occupation.

About the Author Pam Brinegar is the executive director of The Council on Licensure, Enforcement and Regulation (CLEAR), which provides educational programs for professional licensing officials. CLEAR is an affiliate of The Council of State Governments.

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L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L L

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

See footnotes at end of table.

L L L L L

Accountant certified public

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State or other jurisdiction

Agriculture inspector ... ... L ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... L ... ... ...

... ... L ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... L L

Architect L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Auctioneer ... ... L L L

... ... L L ...

L ... L ... L

... L L L ...

... ... L L ...

... ... L L L

L ... L L ...

Barber L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

... L L L L

Cosmetologist L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Embalmer (a) ... L L L L

... L L L ...

L ... ... L L

L L L L ...

L ... L L ...

... L ... L L

L L L L L

Engineer, professional (b) L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Environmental science & protection tech. L ... ... L ...

... L ... ... L

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... L ... ... ...

... ... ... L L

Forester ... ... L ... ...

... ... ... L ...

... L ... ... ...

... ... ... L L

... ... ... ... ...

... L ... ... L

L ... ... L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

... L L L L

L L L L L

Funeral director

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... ... L ... ...

... ... ... L ...

... ... L ... ...

L L ... L ...

... L L L ...

... ... L L L

L ... L L L

Geologist

Table A STATE REGULATION OF SELECTED NON-HEALTH OCCUPATIONS AND PROFESSIONS: DECEMBER 2004 Hazardous materials removal worker ... L ... ... ...

... L ... L L

L L L ... ...

... ... ... ... L

... ... ... ... L

L L L L ...

L ... ... L ...

Insurance agent L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Insurance broker L L L L L

... L L L ...

L ... ... ... L

L ... L L L

... L ... L ...

L L L ... ...

L ... L L ...

Landscape architect L L C L L

L L L ... L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L ... ... L

... C L L L

L L L L L

Polygraph examiner L ... L L ...

L L L ... ...

L L ... L L

... L L L ...

... ... L L L

... ... ... ... L

L ... ... L ...

Real estate agent L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Real estate broker L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Surveyor, land L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Water & liquid waste treatment plant/system operator L L L ... ...

L L ... L L

L L L ... ...

... L ... L ...

... ... L L L

L L L L L

... L ... L L

LICENSURE

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500

L L L L L L L L L L L

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Dist. of Columbia ...............

Agriculture inspector ...

L ... ... L ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... L

Architect L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Auctioneer L

L L L L ...

... L L ... L

... ... L L L

Barber L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Cosmetologist L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Embalmer (a) ...

L L L ... L

L L L ... L

L L ... L L

Engineer, professional (b) L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Environmental science & protection tech. ...

... ... ... L ...

... ... ... ... ...

... L ... L ...

...

... ... L ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... L

Forester

Source: Council on Licensure, Enforcement and Regulation, December 2004 and various national associations of state boards. Key: C—Certification L—Licensure R—Registration (a) In some states, embalmers are not licensed separately from funeral directors; embalming is part of the funeral director’s job. (b) In addition to licensing professional engineers, some states regulate engineers by specific areas of expertise, such as civil engineers.

L L L L L

Accountant certified public

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

State or other jurisdiction

Funeral director L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

...

L ... ... L L

... L ... ... ...

... L L ... L

Geologist

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...

... ... L L ...

L ... ... ... L

L L ... L ...

Hazardous materials removal worker

500 L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Insurance agent

Insurance broker L

... L L ... L

L ... ... L L

L ... L L L

STATE REGULATION OF SELECTED NON-HEALTH OCCUPATIONS AND PROFESSIONS: DECEMBER 2004—Continued

Landscape architect ...

C L L L L

L L L L ...

L L L L L

Polygraph examiner ...

L ... L ... ...

L L L L L

L L ... ... L

Real estate agent L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Real estate broker L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Surveyor, land L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Water & liquid waste treatment plant/system operator ...

L ... ... L L

L L ... ... L

L L ... L ...

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L L ... L L L L L L L ... ... L L L L ... L ... L L L L ... L L L L ... L

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

]Montana ............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

See footnotes at end of table.

... L L L L

Acupuncturist

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State or other jurisdiction

Chiropractor L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Counselor, professional (a) L ... L L L

L L ... C L

L L L L L

L L L L C

... L L ... L

L L L L L

L L C L L

Counselor, alcoholism L L ... ... ...

... ... ... C C

... ... ... ... ...

... C ... L C,L

... ... ... ... ...

C L ... C ...

... ... C ... ...

Counselor, drug L L ... L ...

... ... ... C C

... ... ... C ...

... C C L C,L

... ... ... ... ...

C L ... ... ...

... ... C ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... C ...

... ... ... ... ...

... C (e) ... L ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Counselor, pastoral

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L ... C L ...

L ... C,L C C

... ... ... ... ...

C ... L L ...

C ... ... ... ...

L L ... ... ...

... ... C ... ...

Counselor, substance abuse (b)

Table B STATE REGULATION OF HEALTH OCCUPATIONS AND PROFESSIONS: DECEMBER 2004

Dentist L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Dental assistant (c) C L ... L L

... ... ... ... R

... L L L ...

... ... ... L L

... ... ... ... L

... ... ... C ...

... ... C R L

Dental hygienist L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Denturist ... ... ... ... ...

L ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... L ...

... L ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... L ... ...

Dietitian L C L L L

L L L L ...

L ... L L L

L L L L L

C L L C L

... C C L L

L L ... L R

Emergency medical technician (d) L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Hearing aid dealer & fitter L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

LICENSURE

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501


502

... L L L L L L L L ... L

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Dist. of Columbia ...............

Key: C—Certification L—Licensure R—Registration . . .—Not regulated

... L R L R

Acupuncturist

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

State or other jurisdiction

Chiropractor L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Counselor, professional (a) L

L C L C L

L L L L L

L L L (f) L L

Counselor, alcoholism ...

C ... ... ... ...

... L ... ... L

... ... ... ... ...

Counselor, drug ...

C ... ... ... ...

... L L ... L

... ... ... ... ...

...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Counselor, pastoral

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R

L ... ... ... L

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... C ...

Counselor, substance abuse (b)

502 L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Dentist

STATE REGULATION OF HEALTH OCCUPATIONS AND PROFESSIONS: DECEMBER 2004—Continued

Dental assistant (c) ...

... ... ... ... L

L L ... ... L

C ... ... ... ...

Dental hygienist L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Denturist ...

... L ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... L ... ... ...

Dietitian L

C L L C ...

L L C L C

L L C L ...

Emergency medical technician (d) L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Hearing aid dealer & fitter ...

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

LICENSURE

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503

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... L ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... L L ... ... ... ... ... ...

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire ............. . . . New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

See footnotes at end of table.

... ... L ... ...

Homeopath

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State or other jurisdiction

Massage therapist L L L L L

... L ... L C

... ... ... L L

... L L L C

L ... L ... L

... L L L ...

L ... ... L ...

Nurse, licensed practical (g) L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L ...

Nurse midwife (g) ... L L L L

L L ... L L

L C L L L

L L L L L

L L ... L L

L L L L ...

L L L L L

Nurse practitioner (g) ... L L L L

L L L L L

L C L L ...

L L C L L

L L ... L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Nurse, registered (g)

00C-Brinegar

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L . . .(i) L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Nursing home administrator

STATE REGULATION OF HEALTH OCCUPATIONS AND PROFESSIONS: DECEMBER 2004

Occupational therapy L L L L L

L L L L L

L R L L L

L L L L L

L L L C L

... L L L L

L L L L C

Occupational therapist assistant L L L L L

L L L R L

L R L L L

L L L L L

... L L C L

... L L L L

L L L L C

Optician ... L L ... L

... ... L L L

L ... ... L ...

L L ... ... ...

L L ... ... ...

... L ... L L

... L L L C

Optometrist (h) L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Osteopath L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Pharmacist L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Physical therapist L L L L L

L

L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

LICENSURE

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503


504

... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Dist. of Columbia ...............

Key: C—Certification L—Licensure R—Registration . . . —Not regulated

... ... ... ... ...

Homeopath

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

State or other jurisdiction

Massage therapist L

C L L R ...

... L R L ...

... L ... L L

Nurse, licensed practical (g) L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Nurse midwife (g) L

L L L L L

L L L L L

C L L L L

Nurse practitioner (g) C

L L L C L

L L L L L

C L L L L

L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Nurse, registered (g)

00C-Brinegar

L

L L L L L

L L L (i) L

L L L L L

Nursing home administrator

504 L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Occupational therapy

STATE REGULATION OF HEALTH OCCUPATIONS AND PROFESSIONS: DECEMBER 2004 – CONTINUED

Occupational therapist assistant L

... L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Optician ...

L L ... ... ...

... L L ... L

... ... ... L L

Optometrist (h) L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Osteopath L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Pharmacist L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Physical therapist L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

LICENSURE

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... R L L L ... L L L L L L L L L L ... ... L L L C L L L L L L L L

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

See footnotes at end of table.

L L L L L

Physical therapy assistant

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

State or other jurisdiction

Physician L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Physician assistant L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L C L

C L L L L

L L L C L

Podiatrist L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Psychologist L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Radiologic technologist C L ... L L

L ... ... ... L

L ... R L ...

... L L L R

L ... L C L

... L L L ...

... ... C L C

L L ... ... L

... L ... ... L

L ... L L ...

... ... L L L

L ... L ... L

... ... L L ...

... ... L L L

Radiation therapist

00C-Brinegar

L L L L L

L L ... L L

L ... R L L

L L L L L

... R ... C L

L L ... L L

... ... L L L

Respiratory therapist

STATE REGULATION OF HEALTH OCCUPATIONS AND PROFESSIONS: DECEMBER 2004—Continued

Sanitarian ... ... L L L

L R R ... L

L R R L C

... L L ... L

L L ... R ...

... L ... ... ...

... ... R R ...

Social worker (j) L C,L C,L L L

L L L C,L L

L C L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L ... L

L ... C L L

Speech-language pathologist & aud. L L L L L

L L L L L

L ... L L L

L L L L L

L ... L L L

... L L L L

L L L L L

Therapist marriage & family L L L ... L

... C L L L

L L L L L

C L L L C,L

L L L L L

L L ... L L

L L C L L

Veterinary L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Veterinary technician L L L L L

... L L ... ...

R L L R L

L L R L L

R R L L L

C R ... R L

L L L L R

LICENSURE

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506

L L L ... L L ... L L L L

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Dist. of Columbia ...............

Physician L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Physician assistant L

L L L L L

L L L L C

L L C L L

Podiatrist L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

Psychologist

...

L C L ... L

... ... L ... L

... L ... L C

Source: Council on Licensure, Enforcement and Regulation, December 2004 and various national associations of state boards. Key: C—Certification L—Licensure R —Registration . . . —Not regulated (a) In some states, professional counselors can practice without a license as long as they do not use the title “licensed professional counselor.” (b) In some states, substance abuse counselors use the title “addiction counselor/therapist.” (c) In some states, certification is required for dental assistants to perform expanded functions and take x-rays. (d) There are eight categories of emergency medical technicians, from basic to paramedic to task-specific certifications. No state regulates all categories, but every state regulates at least one category.

L L R L L

Physical therapy assistant

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

State or other jurisdiction

Radiologic technologist

00C-Brinegar

...

... L L ... L

... L L L L

... L ... L C

Radiation therapist

506 Sanitarian ...

... ... L L ...

... C L L ...

L L ... L R

Social worker (j) L

L L L C,L L

L L L L L

L C,L L (f) L L

Speech-language pathologist & aud. ...

L L L L L

L L L L ...

L L L L L

Therapist marriage & family ...

L L ... L L

L L L L L

L L L (f) L L

Veterinary L

L L L L L

L L L L L

L L L L L

...

L L L L ...

L L ... ... R

L L C ... L

Veterinary technician

(e) In Kentucky, pastoral counselors must be certified only if their practice is fee-based. (f) In Pennsylvania, professional counselors, social workers, and marriage and family therapists do not need a license to practice unless they hold themselves out to be licensed. (g) Some states recognize various categories of advanced practice nurses ( e.g. geriatric, school health, and women’s health). (h) In many states, opticians are not licensed separately from optometrists; making and selling eyeglasses is part of the optometrist’s job. (i) In Indiana and Utah, nursing home administrators are not licensed as such, but they are licensed more broadly as health facility administrators. (j) In some states, social work practice is regulated at one or more of the following levels: basic, intermediate, advanced, and clinical. Certification may be required for practice at the lower levels and licensure required for practice at the higher levels.

L

L L L L L

L L L L ...

L L C L L

Respiratory therapist

STATE REGULATION OF HEALTH OCCUPATIONS AND PROFESSIONS: DECEMBER 2004—Continued

LICENSURE

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MOTOR VEHICLES

Trends and Issues in State Motor Vehicle Agencies: More than Just a License By Linda R. Lewis-Pickett Recent events in our society have been the catalyst for rapid change in the way motor vehicle agencies do business. The need to balance highway safety, customer service and security of the homeland has created a challenge that very few industries will ever have to face. The public servant who issued the first driver’s license in the state of New York in 1903 probably had no inkling of the importance that small credential would some day come to hold. Initially intended simply to certify that an individual had earned the right to drive a motor vehicle, today drivers prefer to use it as a primary form of identification—giving its holder the ability to open bank accounts, purchase alcohol and cigarettes, access secure buildings and locations, purchase firearms, register to vote and even obtain a job. As use and dependence on the driver’s license has increased, so has that of the automobile: it has gone from being a luxury item intended for the wealthy to a must-have for nearly every American over the age of 16, a status symbol and the key to job security and freedom. Both the driver’s license and the automobile are now viewed as necessities for anyone who wants to live the American dream. As a result, some people will do just about anything to get a driver’s license or a vehicle, including resorting to theft and fraud. The agencies that administer driver’s license and vehicle information and related highway safety laws increasingly must adjust their processes, networks and staffing to meet the challenges of a rapidly changing environment. Additionally, federal mandates ranging from homeland security to voter registration are stretching resources even further and changing the motor vehicle administration environment to the point that it barely resembles the framework that was initially set up to ensure driver safety. Like it or not, the business of motor vehicle administration has changed. Commissioners of these state agencies have a greater responsibility than ever before. How well they anticipate issues and meet the challenges that have been thrust upon them will impact not only service to citizens, but also possibly their security.

Ensuring Identity In the early to mid-1990s, motor vehicle administrators and law enforcement officials began to no-

tice an increase in the number of cases of identity theft and identity fraud. Some of those cases were related to individuals who wished to enter or stay in the country illegally; others were individuals who were seeking to fabricate clean driving records or who wanted to use someone else’s credit to make purchases. Nearly all cases involved an attempt to obtain a driver’s license fraudulently. Motor vehicle and law enforcement agencies began to work more closely together to combat the issues of identity theft and fraud. New processes were implemented, new networks were put into place and additional identity credentials were required in many states to help ensure that people applying for driver’s licenses were who they said they were. Agencies also formed partnerships with retailers, credit institutions and others in the private sector to work on the problem together. The motor vehicle landscape changed even more significantly after the terrorists attacks of September 11, 2001. Investigations indicate that the terrorists had obtained driver’s licenses and used them as valid identification to move about society and ultimately to board the planes used as weapons. The problem wasn’t with the licenses themselves—most were issued according to existing guidelines. The problem was in both operational practices and the validity of the breeder documents, the documents applicants are required to produce to verify their identity when obtaining a driver’s license. Breeder documents include birth certificates, Social Security cards, passports and immigration documents, among others. Breeder documents have become the subject of intense scrutiny over the past four years, and rightly so. The challenge for motor vehicle agencies is that they are now being compelled to consider not only the validity of their own documents, but of those that are used to issue them. The challenge can be daunting, especially when you consider the sheer number of agencies that issue these documents. For example, there are some 14,000 different birth certificate forThe Council of State Governments

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MOTOR VEHICLES mats that are issued in the United States. Determining whether the one the applicant is presenting is authentic can be nearly impossible. Most states are now using or exploring the use of technology to assist in the verification process of some breeder documents and the information these documents display. The American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA) provides a network to the Social Security Administration so agencies can access an online system to verify Social Security Numbers presented at the counter. The Bureau of Citizenship and Immigration Services has a similar system for authenticating immigration documents. To help ensure that applicants don’t shop for the state that has the most lax identification practices, AAMVA has identified a list of verifiable identification resources that should be acceptable for proving identity, and has recommended that jurisdictions adopt the list to ensure uniformity across the country. These and other efforts to improve the security of the driver’s license are likely to continue and to increase in scope over the next several years.

Crossing State Borders The need for interoperability among states is one of the most critical issues facing motor vehicle administrators today. In the absence of states’ ability to share information quickly and reliably, a small but dangerous percentage of the population will continue to shop around to find the easiest way to get the driver’s license or even the vehicle title they seek. Although standardization and interoperability are national issues, they are managed by the states, and therein lies the dilemma. Even if a state resolves its own issues, it has solved little if it means scofflaws are simply going to the next state over to obtain their documents fraudulently. A motor vehicle agency without technology that crosses state lines is ineffective in today’s world. States must—and do—work together on these critical issues. On behalf of its member agencies, AAMVA is pushing for the establishment of more consistent ways to verify information and conduct business. The business of motor vehicle administration is a multi-state process. The creation of interstate highways and public mobility has created this environment. For more than 40 years, a majority of states have voluntarily participated in two interstate compact agreements, the Driver’s License Compact (DLC) and the Non-Resident Violator Compact (NRVC). Both compacts were established to provide guidelines to states on the licensing process and reciprocity in the treatment of traffic violations or convictions for out-of-state drivers. 508

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Because of the increased need to verify identity in the driver’s license application process, coupled with the increase in identity theft and fraud, the motor vehicle community has a renewed interest in multistate reciprocity agreements and guidelines. The outcome of that interest was a new compact, the Driver’s License Agreement (DLA), which provides a venue for states to verify and transmit driver and conviction information. The DLA combines the DLC/ NRVC, adds identification verification practices and requirements, and has a goal of establishing one driver, one record and one identity. Another multi-state led initiative is the National Motor Vehicle Title Information System (NMVTIS). Annually, criminals continue to produce multi-million dollars in profit due to vehicle theft, odometer rollback, and the misrepresentation of flooded or wrecked vehicles as being damaged. For this reason, we all suffer through increased insurance rates and threats to highway safety. Through NMVTIS, agencies can more easily determine if a vehicle is reported stolen or salvaged before issuing new titles. Law enforcement can be notified and vehicles recovered more quickly and frequently. These are only a few examples of how states are working to improve the safety and security of documents. The progress in this area certainly will continue in the upcoming months and years. Efforts are underway to push for minimum standards for driver’s licenses and issuance practices across states. While this concept is of concern to some states that see it as another federal mandate, it is a tool that will provide some of the greatest gains in the areas of law enforcement and document security. The federal government’s encouragement in requiring states to meet at least minimum standards for issuing driver and vehicle documents would go a long way in helping to ensure the safety of citizens and their property.

Meeting Federal Mandates Another issue that will continue to challenge motor vehicle administrators in the years to come is determining how to best handle federal mandates, especially those that come without funding. State budgets, like those in the private sector, have been severely impacted by the recent downturn in the economy. Motor vehicle agencies, already strapped for cash, must implement government mandates that often require expensive system changes and extensive training for employees. Agencies are reducing staff to offset expenses. The employees who remain are under greater pressure than ever due to their implied role in implementing social change.

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MOTOR VEHICLES Increasingly, federal mandates require motor vehicle administrators to stray farther away from the core mission of their agencies. Voter registration, payment of child support and even high school attendance are in some states being tied to obtaining or holding a driver’s license. The challenge here is that to enact mandates such as these, agencies must find a way to communicate electronically with other state agencies. The federal government can help ease these burdens by simply listening to and working closely with state officials on anticipated mandates. Funding must be addressed before mandates are imposed. The government also can look for ways to speed the promulgation of rules and support states’ efforts to pass enacting legislation.

Addressing a Changing Society Our society’s transience is presenting yet another challenge for motor vehicle administrators. Increasingly, a larger number of customers speak little or no English, and may not understand our country’s rules and systems that relate to driving. Administrators must find ways to educate and train their employees to provide these customers with the service they need. Some states have explored the use of incentives for hiring employees who speak other languages, while others have offered to train their employees to speak Spanish or other languages common to their customers. According to population projections, this challenge will continue to escalate and will not only impact the border states, but almost every other area of the country. Baby Boomers are another group requiring motor vehicle administrators to think outside the box. This segment makes up a large part of our population and, as these drivers age, agencies are beginning to address the needs of the older driver, such as balancing independence with safe driving skills. The issue is one that will continue to impact motor vehicle agencies for at least the next few decades.

Meeting Societal Expectations Motor vehicle agencies’ challenges are not always the result of federal or state mandates, but often are due to the changing expectations of society. We live in a microwave, MTV, reality show society where people want and expect instant gratification. Motor vehicle agency customers want offices to be open

late in the evening and on weekends to allow for their schedules. They want to walk into an office and walk out with a driver’s license or vehicle title in a relatively short period of time. They look for immediate turnaround on permits they need to do their jobs. They expect prompt, courteous and professional service at all times. It is a challenge.

Facing the Challenge E-government is helping administrators to meet many of the day-to-day challenges related to the balance between ensuring document validity and security and serving customers expediently. Many states now allow their customers to conduct transactions online, reducing wait time for customers who must visit an office in person and easing the burden on employees. Additionally, new interfaces between states and business partners will reduce paper handling and speed up the actual delivery of desired services. Both trends undoubtedly will escalate over the next several years as agencies continue to look for ways to do more with less. In the decade ahead, motor vehicle administrators will continue to focus on developing and implementing systems and processes that will help increase the safety of our citizens. They will continue to grapple with the best ways to provide secure systems and outstanding service to their customers. They also will continue to look for opportunities to enhance service to citizens of our country even as their scope of responsibility expands well beyond that of verifying a person’s ability to drive. Motor vehicle administration is not a job for the faint of heart. It is a champion’s job. Each and every day, they will step up to the plate to balance the triad of priorities— highway safety, customer service and safety of our homeland. About the Author Linda R. Lewis-Pickett is president & CEO of the American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA). AAMVA is voluntary, nonprofit, educational organization striving to develop model programs in motor vehicle administration, law enforcement and highway safety. The association’s programs encourage uniformity and reciprocity among the states and provinces, and liaisons with other levels of government and the private sector. AAMVA’s program development and research activities provide guidelines for more effective public service.

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MOTOR VEHICLES Table A Member Status of Driver’s License Compact (DLC) and Non-Resident Violator Compact (NRVC) DLC/NRVC member status State or other jurisdiction

Member of NRVC

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Member of DLC

Member of neither

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

... ... ... ...

Hawaii (a) ........................... Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

Kansas ................................. Kentucky (a) ....................... Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ...

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ (b) ★ ★ ★

...

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ...

Dist. of Columbia ...............

...

★ ★

★ ★ ★

... ... ...

Source: The American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA), January 2005. Key: ★—Yes ...—No Note: Driver’s License Compact (DLC) and the Non-Resident Violator Compact (NRVC). Both compacts were established to provide guidelines to states on the licensing process and reciprocity in the treatment of traffic violations or convictions for out-of-state drivers. (a) Newest members - Hawaii (NRVC), Effective date January 1, 1996;Kentucky (DLC), Effective date August 1996. (b) Inactive, Tennessee dropped out in 1997.

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MOTOR VEHICLES Table B Driver’s License Compact (DLC) and Non-Resident Violator Compact (NRVC) Member Joinder Dates DLC/NRVC Compact member joinder dates State or other jurisdiction

NRVC Effective date

DLC Effective date

Alabama ........................... Alaska ............................... Arizona ............................. Arkansas .......................... California .........................

October 1981 Not a member January 1993 January 1986 Not a member

1966 September 1996 1963 1969 1963

Colorado .......................... Connecticut ...................... Delaware .......................... Florida .............................. Georgia .............................

January 1982 January 1981 February 1979 October 1981 February 1980

1965 January 1993 1964 1967 Not a member

Hawaii (a) ........................ Idaho ................................. Illinois ............................... Indiana ............................. Iowa ..................................

January 1996 October 1992 July 1984 January 1980 November 1980

1971 1963 1963 1967 1965

Kansas .............................. Kentucky (a) .................... Louisiana ......................... Maine ................................ Maryland .........................

January 1983 December 1978 November 1979 January 1982 July 1979

1965 August 1996 1968 1963 July 1978

Massachusetts ................. Michigan .......................... Minnesota ........................ Mississippi ....................... Missouri ...........................

December 1987 Not a member October 1978 March 1979 October 1980

Not a member Not a member January 1990 1962 October 1985

Montana ........................... Nebraska .......................... Nevada .............................. New Hampshire ............... New Jersey .......................

Not a member January 1982 February 1990 January 1982 July 1983

1963 1963 1961 October 1986 1966

New Mexico ..................... New York .......................... North Carolina ................ North Dakota .................. Ohio ..................................

January 1985 June 1982 September 1980 July 1980 January 1985

1963 1965 September 1993 May 1986 October 1987

Oklahoma ........................ Oregon .............................. Pennsylvania ................... Rhode Island ................... South Carolina ................

July 1987 Not a member July 1979 April 1986 January 1981

1967 1963 October 1994 January 1987 August 1987

South Dakota ................... Tennessee ......................... Texas ................................. Utah .................................. Vermont ...........................

May 1980 September 1984 January 1982 July 1985 October 1985

November 1987 (a) September 1993 1965 October 1987

Virginia ............................ Washington ...................... West Virginia ................... Wisconsin ......................... Wyoming ..........................

July 1980 October 1993 July 1978 Not a member July 1987

1963 1963 July 1972 Not a member May 1987

Dist. of Columbia ............

August 1980

November 1985

Source: The American Association of Motor Vehicle Administrators (AAMVA), January 2005. Note: Driver’s License Compact (DLC) and the Non-Resident Violator Compact (NRVC). Both compacts were established to provide guidelines to states on the licensing process and reciprocity in the treatment of traffic violations or convictions for out-of-state drivers. Key: (a) Tennessee joined in 1965 and dropped out in 1997.

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STATE PARKS

Trends in State Park Operations By Daniel D. McLean and Traci Hogan State park agencies have experienced significant growth during the last decade and made progress in personnel, funding and operations. The economy had an early positive impact on state parks during the mid to late parts of the last decade. Recent reductions in state revenues have begun to erode the progress made during the 1990s. State parks are challenged by reduced funding levels, decreases in visitation, and reduction in full-time staff. Entrepreneurship, external funding sources, and increased state park revenue generation are ongoing trends for state parks. State park operations exist in various forms and structure across the United States. State parks predate national parks and are seen as a close to home recreation resource. State parks recorded more annual visits than the National Park Service and U.S. Forest Service combined. State parks represent less than 10 percent of combined state and federal park and recreation acreage and yet record almost 30 percent of all visits. As an outdoor recreation resource state parks are clearly important to Americans. During the 1990s and early parts of this decade, state parks and state government have seen dramatic shifts in funding, tax collection and revenue generation. The mid to late 1990s were characterized as a period of unparalleled economic growth while the early part of this decade resulted in some of the largest declines in state operating budgets and deficits since the 1930s.

Mission of State Parks State parks were originally conceived in the latter-half of the 19th century and confirmed and structured in the early part of the 20th century. The National Conference on State Parks, organized in the early 1920s brought together the diversity of systems and provided common threads for state park administrators to work towards. In more recent years the diversity of the state park systems have found less commonality and more diversity, but as N.C. Landrum suggests, “state parks could serve as closeto-home substitutes for the national parks and provide a complementary alternative to the city parks. Filling that void between the outdoor recreational offerings of the national parks and those of the city parks thus became a major goal, and it is still valid— probably the most valid—purpose that state parks can serve today.”

Methodology Data for this report were collected from the National Association of State Park Directors (NASPD) 512

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Annual Information Exchange (AIX) for fiscal year (FY) 1994 through 2003. In most cases the entire 10-year period was used for data comparisons. In some few instances data is compared for the start point (FY1994), mid-point (FY1998) and end-point (FY2003). The AIX is an annual report collected by NASPD and provided to its members. The report was first conceived in the 1970s and is the primary source of state park data available to state park directors and researchers. The AIX gathers data from seven areas including inventory of areas and acreage, types of facilities, visitation and use, capital improvements, financing, personnel and support groups.

The State Park Estate In FY 2003 state park agencies managed 13,571,028 acres, an increase of 1.8 million acres since 1994 (Table A). Alaska makes the largest contribution to the state park system at 3.4 million acres. Without Alaska included in the total the state park system is a much more modest 10.2 million acres. State parks are not evenly distributed across the United States. The Western region has a proportionally larger portion of the acreage, and the Northeast ranks second in the acreage. State park systems manage multiple types of areas. The AIX identifies nine such types of areas including state parks, recreation areas, natural areas, historic areas, environmental education areas, scientific areas, forests, fish and wildlife areas, and other areas. Within states the designations may vary and frequently are determined by legislatures and areas may be moved among agencies within the state. State park agencies managed 5,842 areas in FY 2003, up from 5,334 in FY 1994. The number of state park managed areas has grown slowly and is representative of a stable, mature system. Most states have had state park systems for sufficient length of time to recognize their importance to the state.

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Table A STATE PARK MANAGED ACRES: FISCAL YEARS 1994–2003 State

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

Alabama ................ Alaska .................... Arizona .................. Arkansas ............... California ..............

49,710 3,239,889 42,703 50,893 1,333,267

49,710 3,242,223 42,703 50,904 1,334,362

49,710 3,250,062 46,351 50,926 1,345,213

49,710 3,288,711 46,356 51,003 1,355,639

49,710 3,290,070 46,356 51,407 1,372,040

49,710 3,291,118 58,526 51,292 1,375,779

49,710 3,291,209 58,528 50,945 1,412,825

49,710 3,291,121 58,491 50,375 1,416,221

49,710 3,325,939 58,512 51,293 1,456,732

49,710 3,353,246 60,921 52,248 1,480,699

Colorado ............... Connecticut ........... Delaware ............... Florida ................... Georgia ..................

337,233 175,214 15,576 432,879 59,137

337,233 176,221 15,528 437,473 66,129

347,055 176,666 17,290 454,481 67,436

347,584 176,045 17,425 510,529 71,150

335,359 175,860 18,189 525,809 71,150

346,149 180,088 20,039 512,538 73,145

347,176 182,993 21,142 547,020 75,712

431,435 184,990 21,395 571,212 78,942

365,142 200,458 22,039 591,525 81,218

360,163 202,027 24,049 602,006 83,808

Hawaii ................... Idaho ...................... Illinois .................... Indiana .................. Iowa .......................

24,615 41,848 391,240 54,221 62,267

24,165 41,848 419,197 59,292 62,329

24,615 41,867 408,175 174,96 62,615

24,615 41,867 401,323 178,277 62,755

24,589 41,039 411,156 178,507 63,071

24,589 43,048 411,156 177,886 63,171

26,689 43,456 304,879 178,315 63,171

27,627 42,917 287,376 178,665 63,171

28,002 44,643 306,066 178,937 63,200

28,018 44,643 326,851 179,181 63,210

Kansas ................... Kentucky ............... Louisiana .............. Maine ..................... Maryland ..............

353,742 42,594 38,751 83,940 242,513

324,177 42,748 39,007 74,973 247,445

29,000 43,110 39,049 567,069 249,087

29,000 43,110 39,053 587,206 291,734

32,300 43,310 39,136 587,558 292,279

52,300 43,310 36,119 94,604 295,135

32,300 43,508 36,099 94,970 258,621

32,300 43,508 37,329 93,634 258,757

32,300 44,290 38,267 96,686 266,136

32,300 44,525 41,204 98,814 266,176

Massachusetts ...... Michigan ............... Minnesota ............. Mississippi ............ Missouri ................

290,927 264,844 242,029 22,784 132,142

314,026 265,391 245,074 22,687 133,632

276,338 266,085 246,524 23,627 136,811

277,498 266,085 246,524 23,627 134,889

285,264 266,251 241,137 24,327 135,738

287,163 265,176 245,083 24,327 136,791

288,801 351,223 255,793 24,287 137,120

290,601 351,264 258,316 24,287 138,357

293,821 284,977 267,209 24,287 138,522

295,211 285,573 219,900 24,287 139,731

Montana ................ Nebraska ............... Nevada ................... New Hampshire .... New Jersey ............

52,241 133,367 146,220 74,554 308,216

52,469 133,455 148,578 153,214 321,143

48,733 133,455 148,578 153,520 327,359

51,014 133,360 131,810 153,520 334,254

51,115 133,024 131,831 74,471 341,301

54,494 133,044 132,565 74,471 343,419

64,916 133,044 132,885 74,471 345,425

65,182 134,230 132,523 78,849 357,805

65,839 134,200 132,524 84,547 376,532

70,868 134,681 132,524 85,709 380,036

New Mexico .......... New York ............... North Carolina ..... North Dakota ....... Ohio .......................

120,793 260,793 135,922 19,743 202,913

120,193 260,793 140,041 19,959 204,274

90,901 260,793 142,739 19,959 204,274

90,901 308,197 143,957 19,959 204,317

90,693 485,045 147,693 20,046 204,852

90,693 1,015,758 158,339 20,046 204,871

90,693 1,015,911 159,028 20,046 205,047

90,693 1,158,450 167,837 18,750 204,445

90,693 1,158,960 168,241 17,276 204,557

90,693 1,532,393 171,409 17,401 163,918

Oklahoma ............. Oregon ................... Pennsyvlania ........ Rhode Island ........ South Carolina .....

71,943 91,656 282,500 8,748 80,388

71,635 92,277 282,500 8,748 81,557

71,172 91,605 282,500 8,853 81,589

71,172 91,638 282,675 8,853 81,589

71,931 92,606 283,001 8,748 81,798

71,586 94,331 283,383 8,748 81,572

71,586 94,869 288,486 8,748 80,459

71,579 94,937 288,795 8,748 80,459

71,667 95,463 289,362 8,748 80,459

71,579 95,129 289,893 8,748 80,459

South Dakota ........ Tennessee .............. Texas ...................... Utah ....................... Vermont ................

92,710 133,118 519,154 97,130 64,035

92,710 133,920 519,154 96,806 64,101

93,219 134,284 669,278 96,481 64,888

93,808 134,884 629,000 113,649 65,080

96,099 142,847 628,227 113,799 77,631

96,099 285,594 628,207 113,799 83,617

97,637 141,247 631,018 113,592 81,529

102,069 142,797 593,139 114,236 68,677

105,386 144,013 668,269 114,532 68,859

105,396 153,636 668,457 121,852 68,776

Virginia ................. Washington ........... West Virginia ........ Wisconsin .............. Wyoming ...............

69,065 248,717 198,765 127,424 119,864

67,451 255,094 198,765 128,097 119,866

65,837 259,520 195,565 139,545 119,866

66,100 263,069 195,565 127,063 126,897

72,610 258,506 195,565 127,811 120,707

75,447 262,226 195,565 128,578 120,930

72,998 258,502 195,565 129,353 121,170

62,006 262,345 195,584 132,238 121,170

62,236 262,134 195,831 132,725 119,266

62,039 259,378 195,831 132,456 119,266

Total ....................... Less Alaska ........... Alaska percent .....

11,684,937 11,837,272 12,300,637 12,484,046 12,653,569 8,445,048 27.73%

8,595,049 27.39%

9,050,575 26.42%

9,195,335 26.34%

9,363,499 26.00%

12,915,624 12,804,717 13,029,544 13,162,230 13,571,028 9,624,506 25.48%

9,513,508 25.70%

9,738,423 25.26%

9,836,291 10,217,782 25.27% 24.71%

Source: Daniel McLean, NASPD Annual Information Exchange Annual Report.

Visitation at State Parks Visitation in state parks remained steady over the reporting period showing a low of 745.7 million in FY 1995 and a high of 786.8 million in FY 2000. Since FY 2000 there has been an annual 2.2 percent decline in reported attendance in state parks. This is

consistent with other studies reporting participation in outdoor recreation. It remains too early to determine if this represents a trend in outdoor recreation participation by Americans. Day use represents 91.8 percent of all state park usage and for most states the peak usage is during The Council of State Governments

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STATE PARKS tween FY 1998 and FY 2002 there were significant increases in state park budgets. This should not be interpreted to suggest that Fiscal year state park budgets grew at the expense of other state agencies, 1993 1998 2003 rather the state park budgets grew Population 263,436,000 276,115,000 290,788,976 at a pace similar to that of state Visitation 752,266,297 760,829,945 735,004,031 Acreage 11,557,507 12,484,046 13,162,230 budgets and growth within other Operating budget 1,188,510,726 1,378,321,917 1,819,345,452 state agencies. In FY 1994 state 1994 dollars 1,188,510,726 1,286,112,181 1,551,719,736 Full time staff 18,844 18,533 20,603 expenditures on state parks repreAcres per 1000 population 43.87 45.21 45.26 sented 0.19 percent of the state Population per acre 22.79 22.12 22.09 budget. In FY 1998 it was 0.24 Acres per 1000 visitors 15.36 16.41 17.91 Visitors per acre 65.09 60.94 55.84 percent and in FY 2002 state parks Acres per full time staff 613.33 673.61 638.85 share of state budgets was still Expenditures per resident $4.51 $4.99 $6.26 0.24 percent. State park budgets Expenditures per visitor $1.58 $1.81 $2.48 Expenditures per acre $102.83 $110.41 $138.22 grew in relation to state revenues Expenditures per resident—1994 $ $4.51 $4.66 $5.34 and state budgets, but the state Expenditures per visitor—1994 $ $1.58 $1.69 $2.11 park share of state budgets reExpenditures per acre—1994 $ $102.83 $103.02 $117.89 mained consistent over the period. Source: Daniel McLean, NASPD Annual Information Exchange Annual Report. Figure A shows that from FY 1994 through FY 1998 state park operating budgets did not keep the summer. Overnight visitation has remained rela- pace with inflation (2.23 percent growth). Beginning tively constant over the reporting period, peaking in in FY 1999 and through FY 2002, operating budgets outpaced inflation, even during the early stages of FY 2002 (72.2 million visitors). State park visitation is affected by a variety of the recession (5.53 percent growth). In FY 2003 the variables. In the past several years some states have impact of inflation hit state park budgets and the actual had to close all or portions of some state parks due dollars dropped for the first time and 1994 dollars to financial problems. Weather appears to be the big- dropped as precipitously, moving state park budgets gest determinant of visitation at state parks. A warm level with inflation. Regardless, state park budgets grew dry summer increases attendance while a cool wet (1994 dollars) from $1.19 billion to $1.47 billion after summer decreases attendance. Since such seasonal reaching a high of $1.56 billion. Based on reports from variations are regional, attendance appears to adjust state park directors the trend began to reverse itself in towards a mean on a national level. Severe weather can have a significant detrimental effect, Figure A: State Park Operating Budgets: Fiscal Years 1994–2003 as was the case with Florida in (In millions of dollars) 2004 when almost every park 1,900 was damaged by one or more hurricanes. 1,800

Table B COMPARISON IMPACTS OF STATE PARK OPERATIONS

Funding of State Parks

1,700

Funding levels in state parks were viewed over the 10-year reporting period using FY 1994 as a base for comparison. Figure A illustrates changes in state park budgets looking at actual dollars, adjusted to 1994 dollars, and 1994 dollars adjusted for inflation. Using actual dollars, it appears that be-

1,600

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1,500 1,400

Adjusted to 1994 Dollars

Actual Dollars

1,300 1,200 1,100

1994 Dollars Adjusted for Inflation 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 Fiscal Year

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Table C STATE PARK GENERATED REVENUES: FISCAL YEARS 1994–2003 State

1994

1995

1996

1997

1998

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

Alabama ..................... $25,371,387 $25,104,845 $24,723,792 $23,321,031 $23,065,581 $26,159,506 $25,213,099 $25,503,390 $24,094,767 $24,011,982 Alaska ......................... 1,339,850 1,724,639 1,957,318 1,929,958 1,937,708 2,105,772 2,011,922 2,343,504 2,340,817 2,290,487 Arizona ....................... 3,250,397 3,572,069 4,114,349 4,287,268 4,505,709 4,520,592 6,934,173 7,152,917 7,055,022 7,667,110 Arkansas .................... 13,167,362 12,647,100 12,804,928 12,998,416 13,450,528 13,310,744 13,502,337 13,983,925 13,738,863 13,657,349 California ................... 74,904,000 58,306,000 63,689,800 63,183,368 61,935,630 68,535,191 54,926,044 49,381,468 39,079,601 59,632,000 Colorado ..................... 8,499,526 Connecticut ................ 3,877,012 Delaware ..................... 4,584,381 Florida ........................ 19,603,397 Georgia ....................... 19,049,713

8,061,593 3,345,317 4,862,030 21,023,986 15,080,647

10,707,556 3,570,600 5,012,582 21,605,518 16,916,897

10,264,145 3,610,921 5,594,093 23,458,663 16,926,897

11,683,703 3,428,297 5,679,200 24,135,101 17,182,325

12,040,322 12,127,312 3,725,981 3,204,719 6,654,239 6,619,439 25,766,021 28,577,198 19,822,858 18,171,785

14,315,644 15,164,684 3,144,679 3,740,903 7,247,897 8,323,111 29,892,927 31,925,406 20,516,081 26,037,139

16,558,008 4,263,925 8,048,570 32,074,581 28,513,609

368,894 2,351,641 6,269,200 9,498,634 2,500,000

0 2,762,576 5,250,550 9,779,984 2,800,000

0 2,800,600 4,281,995 23,120,459 2,700,000

265,821 3,341,458 5,368,781 23,361,333 2,900,000

0 2,879,534 4,744,092 28,746,732 2,025,959

275,345 771,100 3,182,100 3,502,517 950,714 5,199,583 29,265,774 31,355,302 3,265,000 3,234,000

1,792,758 1,795,197 4,060,655 3,427,400 5,435,150 6,019,589 32,080,535 33,513,704 3,130,410 3,386,109

1,995,000 3,123,421 5,857,655 34,172,057 3,431,038

Kansas ........................ 2,978,903 Kentucky .................... 42,043,626 Louisiana .................... 2,355,874 Maine .......................... 1,756,526 Maryland .................... 9,770,392

2,638,385 43,834,979 2,582,020 1,767,628 11,131,232

3,057,437 42,259,624 3,598,112 1,789,459 11,162,748

3,200,000 41,963,592 2,477,907 1,654,154 9,613,668

3,447,281 44,731,502 2,902,482 1,730,449 11,979,262

3,998,100 4,241,568 47,754,520 50,607,030 2,818,562 3,483,768 1,930,814 1,942,841 13,847,396 14,202,135

4,378,888 4,890,768 50,818,008 52,185,097 3,690,344 4,182,818 1,843,272 2,214,197 14,749,818 15,065,042

5,987,490 51,536,213 4,347,753 2,455,615 14,548,253

Massachusetts ............ 7,196,877 Michigan .................... 23,869,753 Minnesota ................... 8,400,000 Mississippi .................. 5,136,567 Missouri ...................... 4,785,551

6,306,333 24,143,049 9,190,000 5,313,088 5,246,544

3,309,674 24,143,049 9,201,000 5,441,881 6,100,443

3,522,686 32,511,314 10,250,000 5,994,375 5,909,145

3,586,732 29,556,984 10,611,000 10,297,457 7,620,759

5,570,434 5,725,161 17,723,606 32,346,662 10,705,000 10,939,000 6,706,072 7,266,094 6,765,801 6,947,196

7,217,763 8,210,610 29,431,947 32,848,145 11,351,000 12,118,000 6,260,457 6,644,844 6,995,477 7,527,206

5,484,070 33,239,617 11,665,000 6,541,571 9,007,013

Montana ..................... 1,324,704 Nebraska .................... 10,174,107 Nevada ........................ 832,725 New Hampshire ......... 4,933,213 New Jersey ................. 6,776,473

1,015,675 10,677,207 1,095,681 4,385,789 6,649,722

1,126,022 11,003,261 1,362,004 5,492,017 6,914,474

1,117,434 12,196,453 1,531,525 5,574,756 7,142,162

1,415,770 12,190,082 1,707,201 4,036,580 7,509,434

1,570,855 1,652,204 13,231,738 13,705,536 1,822,182 1,902,662 9,845,258 12,319,213 7,840,448 7,282,667

1,457,073 1,463,793 10,869,709 14,626,639 1,991,071 2,018,778 7,480,476 7,979,699 7,287,613 8,163,179

1,744,097 17,976,446 2,179,328 8,931,092 7,230,635

New Mexico ................ 3,206,707 New York .................... 37,677,478 North Carolina .......... 2,263,132 North Dakota ............. 719,826 Ohio ............................ 18,304,654

11,780,840 36,930,909 2,848,586 717,996 19,609,021

3,345,216 42,298,725 2,481,371 803,188 20,996,597

3,345,216 54,106,000 2,540,912 718,572 23,060,640

3,441,671 55,156,500 3,298,564 808,035 24,597,212

3,623,266 4,320,400 58,924,072 63,254,371 3,439,904 3,499,641 923,329 1,167,775 25,179,926 26,467,316

4,394,200 4,317,500 63,421,947 65,994,458 3,623,932 3,712,559 1,183,470 1,170,276 26,540,250 26,974,299

3,838,100 69,286,337 3,186,593 1,245,276 27,816,071

Oklahoma ................... 17,831,274 Oregon ........................ 10,729,257 Pennsyvlania .............. 9,033,077 Rhode Island .............. 2,922,066 South Carolina ........... 13,125,394

19,077,362 11,191,361 9,033,077 2,791,560 14,263,721

16,679,489 12,185,177 9,350,298 3,039,065 14,431,180

20,582,514 12,854,199 12,077,187 3,039,065 14,629,534

20,250,204 13,490,677 10,903,971 2,251,585 15,104,228

21,234,176 14,548,069 12,080,000 3,684,049 15,264,641

23,897,358 16,178,862 16,573,866 3,125,885 15,970,410

24,007,738 15,425,001 15,362,350 3,839,332 16,537,120

22,988,827 15,414,162 12,641,196 4,291,517 15,058,144

South Dakota ............. 5,473,158 Tennessee .................... 22,086,565 Texas ........................... 15,745,552 Utah ............................ 4,373,896 Vermont ...................... 4,934,904

5,879,639 23,328,255 19,522,133 4,395,232 4,932,554

5,923,367 24,538,121 18,822,008 5,493,559 4,962,805

6,235,044 23,921,206 12,897,352 6,565,382 4,950,051

6,876,449 23,841,606 15,479,948 6,559,424 5,585,152

7,522,196 7,153,532 26,192,000 28,451,337 26,028,040 21,247,524 7,706,824 7,848,800 5,622,519 5,614,248

7,694,016 8,472,801 30,324,800 32,403,451 24,269,227 25,428,235 7,929,200 8,212,500 5,664,753 6,191,217

9,826,343 28,751,266 26,130,106 7,991,100 6,250,253

Virginia ....................... 2,717,812 Washington ................ 8,342,436 West Virginia ............. 16,221,628 Wisconsin ................... 9,224,556 Wyoming .................... 431,711

3,624,673 9,128,054 14,960,636 10,943,219 427,129

3,977,880 9,337,401 15,250,168 10,229,850 643,086

3,877,079 10,905,142 15,559,233 10,454,214 683,463

5,134,455 39,519,134 16,435,865 11,035,759 697,738

7,258,399 6,476,873 10,367,941 10,573,593 17,364,166 18,035,815 11,438,058 12,854,701 751,109 1,066,543

7,911,583 8,583,791 12,122,366 13,818,288 18,852,238 19,214,102 13,245,674 14,395,841 1,389,994 1,268,640

8,726,989 15,703,194 18,928,398 14,224,379 1,121,910

Hawaii ........................ Idaho ........................... Illinois ......................... Indiana ....................... Iowa ............................

22,804,143 15,253,754 12,612,143 3,237,144 16,057,457

Total ............................ 532,335,768 535,684,625 558,756,150 588,473,329 639,191,251 650,863,629 677,911,377 690,118,887 715,110,626 741,591,146 1994 dollars ................ 532,335,768 524,649,522 536,908,785 555,813,059 596,429,356 599,445,402 612,018,391 619,857,483 619,857,483 632,503,088 1994 inflated dollars .. 532,335,768 543,514,819 554,001,834 563,637,111 570,504,243 577,956,943 589,668,330 603,455,827 614,102,542 624,163,688 Source: Daniel McLean, NASPD Annual Information Exchange Annual Report.

FY 2003 and continues into FY 2004. In the short term state park budgets appear to be moving lower as state budgets move lower. There is no indication that state park share of state budgets is declining. State park generated revenues (Figure B) come from services and sales in state parks and have be-

come an increasingly important revenue source for state parks. State park generated revenue lagged inflation growth through FY 1997. Beginning in FY 1998 and continuing through FY 2003 growth exceeded or kept pace with inflation. The FY 2002 data depicted a flat adjustment, losing ground to inflation The Council of State Governments

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STATE PARKS and the FY 2003 report shows state park revenues it is doubtful that any state park system could bekeeping pace or experiencing a small growth, less come self-sustaining without some type of dedicated fund. Missouri, for example, garners a portion of the than that lost by reductions in the general fund. While total state park generated revenue has in- state sales tax, a process which voters have renewed creased over the last 10 years the share of each rev- two times. This does not suggest that state parks should back enue source has remained fairly constant. The AIX identifies 10 revenue sources. Camping has consis- away from revenue sources, rather it suggests that tently been the largest source of income for state in the light of decreasing financial support from states parks followed by entrance fees (combined account- that state park systems must become more creative ing for over 40 percent of total revenue). As a share about revenue development, about the use of friends of growth in revenues camping showed an increase groups (nonprofits who support state parks), more of 59.8 percent from FY 1994 to FY 2003 (actual creative partnering with public, private and nonprofit dollars), lodges increased 54 percent, cabins and cot- agencies, and building stronger constituencies. There tages increased 52.1 percent, and entrance fees in- are excellent examples of state park systems becoming more creative, finding new revenue sources, paycreased 33.7 percent for the same period. State park operating budget funding sources (Fig- ing more attention to visitors, but there are also sysure C) include state park revenue (that returned to tems that struggle under the political structure that the state park agency), general fund, dedicated look upon state parks as a political reward or busources, federal funds and other. The general fund reaucracies that are so tradition bound that moveis the single largest contributor of state park operat- ment forward is all but impossible. ing funds ranging from a low of 42.3 percent (FY 2003) to a high of 49.6 percent (FY 2001) and aver- Personnel Full-time positions grew at an average rate of 1.1 aging 46.6 percent. State park generated revenue has contributed an average of 38.5 percent (high of 41.9 percent for the reporting period with the largest numpercent in FY 1996 and a low of 33.5 percent in FY ber of full-time employees in FY 2002 at 21,148 full2001). Figure C suggests that as the general fund time and 35,483 seasonal and part time employees. increases or decreases there is a corresponding shift The lowest number of full-time employees was rein park revenues (in the opposite direction). These ported in FY 1996 at 18,772. FY 2003 showed a deshifts appear to have remained fairly constant ex- crease in all three categories of employees and it is cept for FY 2003 where general fund dollars declined anticipated it will continue in the short term. Fourat a rate higher than park revenue increased. This teen states reported permanent layoffs during FY was offset, in part, by an almost 5 percent increase 2003 and FY 2004. Reporting during FY 2004 19 in dedicated funds in FY 2003—the highest recorded states have had layoffs based on open positions that will not be filled. during this period. It would seem, based on the data, that dependence on revenues as the primary source for Figure B: State Park Generated Revenues: Fiscal Years 1994–2003 operating state parks is not well (In millions of dollars) founded. Park revenues are 750 more volatile than the general 725 fund and dependent upon a 700 number of variables. There has 675 been much discussion in the Actual Dollars 650 states about funding state parks Adjusted to 1994 Dollars from self-generated revenues 625 and dedicated funds. No state 600 1994 Dollars park system has been success575 Adusted for Inflation fully funded wholly from self550 generated revenues. Combined 525 with the decline in visitation, 500 inability of state parks to eas1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 ily adjust fees, and dependence Source: Daniel McLean, NASPD Annual Information Exchange Annual Report. on weather related challenges, 516

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Measures of Operations

Percent

There are no established standards for measuring state parks. Each state park system generates data as requested by its legislature or office of planning and budget. There are, however, common measures that multiple states employ. In most cases they will compare to either similar states or the system as a whole. For the purposes of this report, common standards that have seen use by various agencies and could be applied by states are presented in Table B. Table B looks at comparisons of population, visitor, expenditure, full-time personnel and acres. During the period reported the acres per 1,000 population grew reflecting the growth of the state park estate. Visitors exceed the U. S. population by a factor of 2.5 (or each member of the U.S. population visited a state park 2.5 times during each year) and the density of use is recorded in visitors per acre. As expected, the visitors per acre declined over the period. Density of usage should be noted as a specific item of concern. Not all state parks receive equal numbers of visitors and not all visitation is distributed equally among state park acreage. Most attendance is present in relatively small built-up areas in state parks, thus confounding the problem of density of use as well as impact on the environment. Seasonal and part-time staff are present in state parks as a support to the existing full-time staff. The report suggests that even as staff has increased over the period, it has been at a slower pace than land acquisition. In FY 2003 there are more acres per full-time staff than in FY 1994. It is likely this trend will continue in the short term as state park systems continue to experience

declines in operating budgets and staff. From a positive perspective expenditures have increased, whether viewed in actual dollars or in 1994 dollars. From the latter perspective growth has been less than state park managers might have desired, but nonetheless, growth has allowed state parks to make progress towards serving visitors.

Trends

The mission of state parks has remained fairly consistent over time. It has varied in some states, but state parks are a combined natural resource management agency and outdoor recreation provider. Urban parks, though not measured as a separate type of park, have become more common. Massachusetts, for example, joined with the Boston metro parks as a single state agency. New York’s second busiest state park is located in New York City. Indiana has two urban state parks in Indianapolis, one a former military base and the other designated as a state park, but is not under the operation of the state park system. Most state park agencies operate under a traditional natural resources umbrella, yet a few are under tourism and there has been limited and slow growth in this area. The dual mission of resource manager and outdoor recreation provider are not mutually exclusive but sometimes create conflict because the two missions are not compatible. State park managers are expected to be competent in resource management, maintenance management, administrative tasks, personnel management, community relations, planning, leadership and visitor services. The breadth of expectations of state park managers is continuing to grow and fund raising, entrepreneurship, and small business management are becomFigure C: Percentage of Contribution to Operating Budget ing essential, if previously unanticipated skills. 50 General Fund Funding is at the core of 45 state park operations. There is 40 no national inventory of Park Generated Revenue 35 maintenance backlogs (unat30 tended maintenance issues), 25 but funding of state park maintenance will have to be20 Dedicated Sources come less dependent upon 15 general funds as a matter of 10 Other Sources course. For most, the disap5 pearance of general fund supFederal Funds 0 port is not an alternative. 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 While state parks have beSource: Daniel McLean, NASPD Annual Information Exchange Annual Report. come more self-sufficient, the The Council of State Governments

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STATE PARKS data does not suggest revenue generation can continue to keep pace with inflation or replace the general fund as a significant source of operating funds. As attendance declines, so will state park generated income, especially as state parks are dependent upon legislatures and external boards to determine fee structures. In FY 2004, 27 states reported a self-funding component allowing fees and other revenues to go directly into their operating fund. Thirty-three states reported they see the self-funding initiative increasing. Allowing state parks to retain all or part of their generated revenue is a positive effort, but many legislatures prefer to have more rather than less control over spending. Dedicated sources of funds are growing and while it remains only a small part of the sources of operating funds, it may become an attractive source for some states as they struggle to maintain level revenues. If attendance in outdoor recreation continues to decline, or if it stabilizes at a lower level, state parks will need to rethink who their audience is and how to attract new visitors. The growth of urban state parks is one tool that may introduce residents to outdoor recreation, but no studies have been done to determine if such efforts have a carry-over effect to more rural state parks. States have reallocated some state park lands to municipal and county systems when it is apparent the lands are appropriately managed by that entity.

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Twenty-four states report having done so in recent years. This is an ongoing trend highly dependent upon the legislature in most states.

Summary State parks continue to provide a significant outdoor recreation resource close to many Americans. State parks are a part of the American fabric of life. Levels of participation in state parks remain high and will continue to do so in the future. Funding for state parks has always been problematic and current trends do not suggest this will change. State park managers have moved from traditional resource manager roles to more complex roles serving multiple constituencies and demanding an ever-increasing level of knowledge and sophistication. Reference Landrum, N. C. The State Park Movement in America: A Critical Review. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. 2004.

About the Authors Daniel D. McLean is a professor and chairperson of the Department of Recreation and Sport Management at Indiana State University. He has served as the research director for the National Association of State Park Directors for nine years and manages the Annual Information Exchange. Traci Hogan is a graduate student in the Department of Recreation and Sport Management at Indiana State University.

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TELECOMMUNICATIONS

Telecommunications Policy: Life, Liberty and Data By Wayne W. Hall Jr. Telecommunications used to mean earnest debates about regulation, legislation and taxation, the instruments of government. It was about the telephone network. But popular demand for mobility and computing technology has forever changed that discussion. The communications technology industry is in the midst of a long-term transition away from the public switched telephone network towards always-on networks that use Internet and wireless technologies. Old distinctions no longer apply. These new networks are built as much around individuals as technology. Success from Failure

Unwired

This essay is about telecommunications, which for policy-makers means an earnest discussion about regulation, legislation and taxation, the instruments of government. Much of the current policy struggle is really a very big fight over the various fees that show up on telephone bills. In 2005, legislators in Congress will rewrite the 1996 telecommunications act, which, other than to encourage consolidation, generally failed to substantially alter the telecommunications and media landscape and has been rendered increasingly meaningless by developments in communications technology. People are making different choices to communicate at home and in business, often using computer and wireless technologies to accomplish more than at any time in the past. Access and universal service fees for example, though still important, are holdovers from an era when telecommunications meant “phone company.” The phone company funded certain national goals such as universal service. Fine tuning the existing regulatory structure has proven to be an arduous task. Federal courts have consistently returned FCC rules back to the commission for more work. The irony is that as these obligations have grown – universal service commitments are now at historic highs – the regulated portion of the communications marketplace is in decline. The long distance industry as a distinct market segment is rapidly vanishing. In an effort to rewrite telecommunications law, congressional leaders will have to account for an FCC that now appears ready to limit its own regulatory impulses. FCC commissioners consistently note that they are not in the business of picking technology winners and losers while simultaneously praising, for example, wireless technologies for bringing communications to the rural and urban poor in the nation. While not exactly laissez-faire, the direction is unmistakable.

The Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Economic Analysis shows that Information Technology (IT) as an industry led economic expansion in the late 1990s. And despite the subsequent stock market crash, IT remains an important driver of national— and international—economic growth. According to survey data from the Pew Internet and American Life Project, more than a quarter of all Americans can now use wireless-enabled devices like notebook computers and cellular phones to connect to the Internet.1 Many of these people will use free or cheap connections thanks in part to an effort by the FCC to make radio spectrum available for market experimentation. One of the FCC’s biggest achievements in recent years is the culmination of decision made 20 years ago to permit unlicensed devices to operate in socalled “junk” frequency bands—meaning not very valuable commercially—as long as they did not interfere with licensed services. For years, cordless phones and baby monitors filled that particular spectrum niche. That has changed dramatically. Marketed by the computer industry as “WiFi,” a relatively new wireless technology makes possible a broadband wireless connection of 100 feet or so, far enough, particularly in urban areas, to reach a high speed landline connection to the Web. WiFi access points have mushroomed all around the country thanks to a demand for these connections. The service is particularly attractive to on-the-go professionals who need to work in airports, coffee shops and hotel rooms. Municipal governments have been quick to seize on this to expand the notion of economic development to include broadband communications services. Making use of city property such as lampposts, large municipalities such as Philadelphia have ambitious plans to use WiFi to connect entire cities to the Web with relatively little expenditure in money. Philadelphia recently worked out an agreement with Verizon The Council of State Governments

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TELECOMMUNICATIONS to permit the municipality to build the infrastructure despite a statutory claim the carrier could make on the business.2 WiFi appears to have a cost advantage when it comes to building the infrastructure. For one thing, it avoids trenching and laying cable. And because it can raise funds and avoid state taxes, cities have some cost advantages to building such networks. While the cost recovery model may vary from place to place, new deals between carriers and municipalities to build these networks appear more and more likely. Why should states care? The economic development benefits to state government from the expansion and development of broadband wireless infrastructure is crucial to luring business. Cities are important engines of growth and where, at least for now, the creative class chooses to live. In addition, the federal government since 2002 has made spectrum policy and wireless broadband a priority.3 The FCC will continue to push hard for policies that promote wireless development. Internally, after a series of management initiatives federal agencies have been ordered to make better use of the spectrum they do have.4 Cabinet level agencies have a year to develop a comprehensive “spectrum needs plan” to address issues related, for example, to public safety. As with many federal initiatives, that effort will likely affect how states conduct business.

Blurring Distinctions In existing circuit-switched networks, an open voice connection is maintained end-to-end. There is literally a continuous connection between handsets. Switches serve as the brains of this network, sorting out all the paths in between. Grossly simplified, it is not so far removed from a wire strung between two tin cans. But in an Internet protocol (IP) network, transmissions are chopped into fragments, or packets, each with a home and destination address. Each packet is routed, along many separate paths if needed, until reassembled and interpreted by software at its destination as speech, data or video. The result is a “stateless” or “connectionless” network since no connection is maintained from beginning to end. Voice calls today are increasingly made using computer-like appliances that while bearing the appearance of a phones, are in fact much closer to personal computers in the way they work. Conversations can be sliced, diced and synthesized like any other computer file and transported over Internet-like networks. In this technological shift there is a powerful force. Time, distance and geographic boundaries are blurred if not eliminated. 520

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This presents a problem for regulators at all levels of government, which has, unacknowledged until the recent past, been in the business of regulating a particular technology associated with copper circuits and the arrangements made to send and receive voice calls from a telephone wired to the kitchen counter. Historically, there was a neat division of authority. State regulators regulated calls completed within the state. And federal regulators regulated calls between states. Just how the states will regulate these new arrangements where a customer’s area code may not actually correspond to the geographic source of a call is being worked out now. But the bottom line is that the federal government will likely gain a great deal of clout. State tax codes will need to be addressed too. New congressional legislation bans Internet access taxes, regardless of technology, until November 2007.5 But in a nod to existing regulatory gray areas, the bill added that “any service that results in a telephone call, regardless of the technology behind it, can continue to be taxed (emphasis added).” Meanwhile, the FCC moves ahead. In a February 2004 ruling, the commission decided that ‘Net-only, or “computer-to-computer” calls, would be unregulated.6 By making telephony another software application, Voice-over-IP (VoIP) attacks the billing models of traditional service because time and distance are largely irrelevant. More recently, it has found that popular new calling services offered to consumers for use over home broadband connections are essentially interstate services, which removes such services from state regulatory oversight. This decision is a brief stopover on the way to another regulatory destination: determining whether such calls are “telecommunications” or “information” services. The FCC has traditionally regulated telecommunications services, whereas information services have been unregulated. Again, this is a legacy distinction developed in an earlier age. As of this writing, consumer all-you-can-talk VoIP deals can be had for about $25 per month. Because the real costs of the services are actually much lower than traditional phone offerings—thanks in part to fewer government mandated fees—they’re more profitable. It would be a mischaracterization to suggest that customers are fleeing traditional local phone service en masse. But there is a growing awareness that new ways of making phone calls are available and the industry, particularly AT&T and MCI, which were the most dependent on the long distance model, is working to position itself for a new age.

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Can You Hear Me Now? Without time or geographic constraints, the Internet is fast becoming the new communications platform of choice, functioning more like a public utility than private enterprise. Consumers plug into it like an electrical outlet. They receive information rather than electricity. This utility is relentlessly efficient. It squeezes any market it touches by making the cost necessary to produce any item apparent to the consumer. Armed with this knowledge, consumers can wring savings from financial exchanges by going directly to the producer. Formerly profitable products and services become commodities. One result of this brutal efficiency is the collapse of the long distance market. AT&T has left the consumer long distance market altogether. IBM will sell its personal computer division, an industry it virtually created, to a Chinese firm whose operating costs are undoubtedly lower.7 This reality is steadily reshaping the software industry. For example, open source software development is now more acceptable as an alternative to the Microsoft monopoly on the desktop. “Open source” is computer software for which the original code is in the public domain. Anyone can develop the code as long as they make their enhancements available to everyone else. The open source operating system Linux is one result of this kind of software development. These efficiencies affect related businesses. Chipmaker Intel is getting behind Linux.8 Other open source success stories like Firefox, a speedy and feature-rich Web browser, are gaining market share, which meets the test of open source acceptability: people want it.9 Massachusetts now gives a purchasing preference to openly developed software. This issue also appears on the agenda of the National Association of State Chief Information Officers.

“We the Media” The nature of information and communications technology is obviously changing the marketplace. Whereas telecommunications could once be managed, regulated and taxed as a discreet thing, it’s a much different activity now. An industry in which every participant can in theory, if not in fact, effortlessly communicate across time, distance and geographic boundaries with any other member is far more challenging for government to address. From a cultural viewpoint, the new world of telecommunications and information technology is as much about media as technology.10 The ideas, inter-

ests and conversations of people are where a lot of money is made. Like the open source movement, broadly successful technology now originates in the public sphere. For example, instant messaging keeps tabs on the people you’ve invited into your communications circle. Your “buddy list” lets you know at a glance which people are available to chat using a feature called “presence.” Instant messaging is extremely popular among teenagers for whom the social network is paramount. The technology of presence has business potential as well. Microsoft is investing heavily to field applications that will make instant messaging useful to business and government.11 This change affects the jobs of telecommunications and information technology professionals. Instead of acting as plumbers, they are just as likely now to talk about such issues as personal identity, authentication and reputation. By creating a national commons, communications technology is more than the sum of its hardware, whether it be wireless access points, handheld devices and notebook computers. It is not the sole domain of engineers and software developers. Nor is it the property of the evening news. In a media-saturated culture, the one-to-many broadcast model used in television or print media is being overtaken by a society that can relate the news to each other. Given the ability to bring new facts to the table, a popular press is thriving. In several recent instances print and broadcast media outlets have found themselves on the defensive by being careless with the public trust. This has prompted serious discussion between journalists and between marketing and advertising professionals over what instant information access means in their industries. As it turns out, ordinary people will factcheck what they hear. “We the media,” indeed. Some object that information ghettos have materialized, that given the choice citizens will consume only the information with which they agree. There are still areas beyond the reach of telecommunications and technology networks that must be reached. But the Pew Internet and American Life Project published research saying that assumption is wrong. Wired Americans are exposed to more points of view than nonwired citizens. Furthermore, they are not using the Web to consume only news with which they agree.12 State government, being in the business of safeguarding personal records, promoting economic development and providing for public health and safety, has not yet begun to grapple with how this phenomThe Council of State Governments

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TELECOMMUNICATIONS enon will affect it. Yet is has implications for the structure, management and flow of government and for how the governed will talk with their representatives. Unfortunately, there is still a tendency to view telecommunications and information technology as simply the set of pipes necessary to move information around, that as elaborate and technically challenging as it has become, it’s still just so much plumbing. This is bound to change if for no other reason than the coming generation has other ideas. These technologies are for them the normal respiration of a free people in pursuit of life, liberty and data.

Notes 1 Pew Internet & American Life Project, http:// www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/PIP_Wireless_Ready_Data_ 0504.pdf. 2 “Philly, Verizon Deal Lets WiFi Plan Go Forward,” CNN.com, http://www.cnn.com/2004/TECH/internet/12/ 01/wireless.philly.ap/index.html. 3 Michael K. Powell, “Broadband Migration III: New Directions in Wireless Policy,” http://www.fcc.gov/ Speeches/Powell/2002/spmkp212.html. 4 “Bush orders agencies to define use of radio spectrum,” Government Computer News, http://www.gcn.com/ vo11_no1/daily-updates/28018.html. 5 Jonathon Krim, “Moratorium on Web Tax Advances,”

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Washington Post, http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/ articles/A58613-2004Nov17.html. 6 A copy of the FCC’s decision can be found online at http://www.pulver.com/reports/pulver-decision.pdf. 7 “IBM Sells PC Unit to China’s Lenovo,” Rueters, http:/ /www.olympics.reuters.com/newArticle.jhtml?type= businessNews&storyID=7022724. 8 Cynthia L. Webb, “Linux Ready for Prime Time, Intel Says,” Washington Post Filter, http://www.washingtonpost. com/wp-dyn/articles/A9694-2004Nov24.html. 9 OneStat.com, (November 22, 2004), http:// www.searchenginejournal.com/index.php?p=1082. 10 We the Media is the title of a book by Dan Gillmor. A copy of the work is available online at http:// wethemedia.oreilly.com. 11 Om Malik, “Talking Turkey: Microsoft’s Plan to Take Over IP Applications,” Business 2.0, (November 16, 2004), http://www.business2.com/b2/web/articles/0,17863, 783501,00.html. 12 “The internet and democratic debate,” Pew Internet & American Life Project, http://www.pewinternet.org/pdfs/ PIP_Political_Info_Report.pdf.

About the Author Wayne W. Hall Jr. has worked with the NASTD – Telecommunications and Technology Professionals Serving State Government – for 15 years. He is currently the Technology Analyst for NASTD.

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Chapter Nine

SELECTED STATE POLICIES AND PROGRAMS

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EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT

State Emergency Management and Homeland Security: A Changing Dynamic By Trina R. Sheets The discipline of emergency management is at a critical juncture in history. Even before the horrific events of September 11th, 2001, emergency management and other public safety disciplines had recognized the growing implications and reorganized to deal with the growing threat of terrorism. The national effort towards achieving “homeland security” is challenging the resources, relationships, organizational responsibilities and fundamental principles of the entire emergency response community. The relationships between the community of emergency management and the new and evolving dynamic we call homeland security is yet to mature or be defined so that a clear and achievable future path to greater national security and safety can be pursued. Introduction Three years following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 the federal government remains keenly focused on developing national goals and strategies that will help enhance the nation’s capability to prevent, prepare for, respond to and recover from incidents of terrorism. While no additional attacks have occurred on U.S. soil, the threat remains and federal, state and local governments continue to be vigilant and focused on keeping citizens, communities and the national infrastructure safe from harm. While federal funding and resources trend toward support of homeland security activities at the expense of all hazards emergency planning and dayto-day public safety programs, Mother Nature recently reminded us she’s still our biggest threat when four major hurricanes struck the state of Florida in the span of a three month period in the fall of 2004. These four consecutive hurricanes required the largest deployment of federal, state and interstate resources in the nation’s history. Yet terrorism remains the number one focus of the federal government. This newly defined national priority has created an incredibly new and dynamic interaction of local, state, and federal governments, the private sector and the international community.

Emergency Management Organizations State emergency management agencies are responsible for developing emergency operations plans and procedures for all disasters and emergencies (including homeland security); training personnel; and conducting drills and exercises with local governments, other state agencies, volunteer agencies and the federal government. Emergency management agencies are also responsible for coordinating and facilitating the provision of resources and supplemen-

tal assistance to local governments when events exceed their capabilities. In the aftermath of a disaster or emergency, the emergency management agency coordinates public education, information and warning; conducts damage assessments, resource management and logistics; facilitates mutual aid, sheltering and mass care; manages transportation and evacuation; leads incident management; and oversees the emergency operations center.1 In times of disaster, the nation’s governors depend on the emergency management agency to provide damage estimates, assist the governor’s office in crisis communications by providing accurate and realistic information, activate mutual aid agreements to move resources quickly and efficiently, and to coordinate with local volunteer organizations to manage donations and supplementary assistance. The organization of state emergency management agencies varies widely. Currently, in 13 states, the emergency management agency is located within the department of public safety; in 20 states it is located within the military department under the auspices of the adjutant general; and in 11 states, it is located within the governor’s office. Regardless of agencies’ organizational structure for daily operations, emergency management ranks high among governors’ priorities. In 29 states, the emergency management director is appointed by the governor. The position is appointed by the adjutant general in 12 states, and by the secretary of public safety in seven states. Homeland Security Structures The attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon increased public awareness of the potential for domestic terrorism incidents and hastened preparedness efforts by all levels of government. The challenge states continue to face is to integrate homeThe Council of State Governments

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EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT land security planning and response activities into their existing emergency management and response systems. All states have designated a homeland security point of contact. This position has become a critical component of a governor’s staff and one that has an enormous responsibility to the public for preparing citizens, businesses and governments for the next emergency or large-scale disaster. To date, 17 states have established a unique position of homeland security director. In nine states, the emergency management director is the primary point of contact, and in eight states it is the adjutant general or director of the military department. Nine public safety secretaries also serve in the position. Several states have merged their emergency management and homeland security agencies and have named one individual to oversee both programmatic areas. Increasingly, the homeland security director is becoming less a political appointment in the governor’s office and more institutionalized in the organizational structure of state government.The number of homeland security offices, departments or agencies authorized through executive order or state statute has increased significantly over the last year. Funding and personnel for these offices has been on the rise as well, often matching and in many cases, surpassing the resources of the state emergency management agency and other state response agencies. The number of state personnel dedicated to homeland security activities ranges from two people to over 70 people. In several states, personnel from the emergency management agency have been transferred or reassigned to support homeland security functions. In others, homeland security functions have been an added responsibility for existing staff in the agency designated as the lead for homeland security. The majority of funding for homeland security offices comes from the federal government in the form of grants, although several states have appropriated their own funds to support counter terrorism. A popular and very necessary funding initiative among states to increase their preparedness levels is investing resources in statewide interoperable communications systems. Systems on the market today that allow the various emergency response disciplines to talk to each other through both voice and data cost several million dollars and require long-term financial investments by states and communities. There is not enough federal funding available to support such comprehensive interoper-able communications systems throughout the country. Many states have undergone internal reorganiza526

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tions to adequately staff and fund homeland security offices and to appropriately realign their resources to accommodate the threat of terrorism. Seventeen states have recently completed or are planning a reorganization to address homeland security. Already, 15 states have combined the functions of emergency management and homeland security into one agency or department. In 16 states the two agencies have equal standing in the organizational structure. States are also employing regional approaches to homeland security. Regional coordination refers to defined areas within a given state or several states that have agreed to work together on common preparedness goals. These approaches provide for greater coordination and maximize state and federal funds. Mutual aid, or the sharing of resources across jurisdictional lines, is an important component of regional coordination. States can capitalize on the existing capabilities and years of experience and lessons learned from past disasters, which can be readily applied to domestic terrorism events. Emergency management is the central coordination point for all resources and assistance provided during disasters and emergencies, including acts of terrorism. Many states are building upon this experience and leveraging the ability of emergency management to bridge the gaps in communication and mobilize its resources to respond to any type of disaster, however unique, specialized or isolated. Short-Term Investments for a Long-Term Problem For the past several years, Congress and the federal government have provided billions of dollars to build a national capacity for domestic preparedness. Funding was provided through states for distribution to local governments in support of objectives identified in the statewide homeland security strategies required by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. Congress requires that 80 percent of all funding be passed through to local governments leaving a much smaller amount for use by the state to coordinate the state strategy. Just three years into the funding cycle, homeland security money is being diverted from states to major metropolitan cities. There is no doubt that big cities are considered serious targets for terrorism and their resource needs are significant. Instead of increasing the overall funding level to accommodate major city needs, money is being shifted from one level of government to another. Developing isolated pockets of capability for counter terrorism does nothing to promote statewide or regional coordination. In addition, Congress is considering legislation that would change the funding allocation

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EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT formula for states to receive federal homeland security grants, placing greater emphasis on risk and critical infrastructure vulnerability as opposed to the current approach of allocating dollars on a percentage plus population basis. Changes in funding allocations will have major impacts on smaller rural states that have become accustomed to receiving their share of terrorism preparedness monies. The terrorism response equipment purchased by states and localities, planning efforts and training conducted for thousands of state and local emergency response personnel require long-term support from the federal government for what can be characterized as a national security effort. Otherwise, the achievements that have been made thus far will fall to the wayside very quickly as day-to-day public safety needs consume the attention and resources of state and local governments. Among states and emergency response disciplines, there is a common concern regarding long-term sustainable federal funding for homeland security. Traditional Funding is Losing Out While money remains in the pipeline for such programs as bioterrorism preparedness, law enforcement prevention activities and terrorism response equipment purchase, funding for traditional programs such as the Predisaster Mitigation Program, the Hazard Mitigation Grant Program, and the Emergency Management Performance Grant is losing its foothold. These programs provide long term, critical operational funding for emergency management and the proven, successful programs that minimize the risk to property and life before a disaster occurs. Earmarking funds for a particular need is a popular legislative strategy, but traditional funding for basic state emergency operations, grants management, non-homeland security related training, and public outreach has been lost in a wave of stovepipe funding for equipment, terrorism exercises, border and port security, and critical infrastructure protection. These are legitimate needs, but states and locals are struggling to simply maintain adequate staffing levels, pay overtime and administer the funds channeled through their agencies. Funding for emergency management programs has been stagnant for over a decade, with only modest increases in state operating budgets despite the national focus on homeland security. State budget cuts due to revenue shortfalls have hit emergency management and public safety agencies at a time when more is expected from them. Increased responsibilities for homeland security and the loss of adequate

funding for basic operations have taken their toll. In fiscal year 2005, agency budgets ranged from $410,000 to $280 million, plus state disaster appropriations ranged from $20,000 to $560 million. The national average for state agency operating budgets was $12 million, and when disaster appropriations are included the national average increases to $26 million. This represents a significant decrease from fiscal year 2004. These budgets support an average of 70 full-time employees. Staffing levels in individual agencies range from 13 to 459 full-time employees. Most new federal funds are being directed specifically toward homeland security activities, while ignoring the needs of basic public safety systems. The nation’s emergency management and response system can support homeland security efforts, but must be made more robust and then maintained over the long-term. As their budgets allow, some states are doing their part by appropriating additional funds for homeland security related activities such as planning, training, and exercises; intelligence sharing and analysis; improvements to local emergency operations centers; critical infrastructure protection; increases in law enforcement personnel; support costs for homeland security staff; and matching funds to assist local jurisdictions in meeting federal grant requirements. However, more can be done. States need the flexibility to direct federal funds to fill the gaps where they cannot – whether it be to develop a specialized response capability to deal with particular threats or to enhance overall emergency preparedness within the state.

A New Strategy for Response Homeland Security Presidential Directive #5 – Management of Domestic Incidents calls for the U.S. Department of Homeland Security to integrate the current family of federal domestic prevention, preparedness, response and recovery plans into a single all-hazards plan, and to develop a comprehensive national incident management system to respond to terrorist incidents and natural hazards.2 The fundamental requirements of this National Response Plan (NRP) are to develop a consistent approach to domestic preparedness as well as to incident management across the life cycle of the incident—from awareness, through prevention and preparedness, and into response and recovery—and to improve the effective use of resources that are available to during each step of the this cycle.3 The NRP: ■ Creates a single, all-hazards plan that is flexible enough to accommodate all types of disasters and The Council of State Governments

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EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT applies to all of the disciplines involved in the response; ■

Emphasizes the unity of effort among all levels of government, private industry, volunteer organizations, and the public;

Places equal emphasis on awareness, prevention, preparedness, response and recovery; and

Establishes federal authorities to coordinate federal response efforts and outlines involvement of the Department of Homeland Security in incident management.

The NRP is being rolled out by the Department of Homeland Security in early 2005. The plan has wide implications for state and local governments, as they work to rewrite their existing emergency operations plans to reflect new relationships and protocols identified in the NRP. State and local stakeholder organizations have provided a significant amount of input to ensure that the plan does not create a new system entirely, but rather, takes advantage of the best procedures states already have in place. The new approach will take time to implement and exercising of the system will be needed.

Mutual Aid Reaches New Heights The Emergency Management Assistance Compact (EMAC) is a national interstate mutual aid agreement that allows states to share resources during times of disaster. EMAC has been in existence since 1992. To date, 48 states, two territories and the District of Columbia are signatories to EMAC. Membership requires that the compact legislation be enacted by the state legislature and signed into law by the governor. The 2004 hurricane season required an extraordinary interstate mutual aid response to assist the impacted states of Florida, Alabama and West Virginia. EMAC reached a historic milestone when over 800 people from 38 states were deployed to help with disaster response and recovery efforts. EMAC assistance continued for over 85 straight days. The greatest needs were in the areas of 24 hour staffing for local emergency operations centers, managing donations, providing community outreach services to ensure disaster victims know where and how to access federal disaster assistance, and assisting the elderly and special needs population groups housed in emergency shelters. EMAC teams were also deployed to the Washington, D.C. headquarters of the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) where they worked for several weeks in coordination with FEMA and other federal agencies provid528

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ing emergency support. This was the largest state to state utilization of mutual aid in history and the disaster threatened to overwhelm the federal government’s response capability as well which made EMAC so valuable to the overall response. As EMAC proved itself once again as the nation’s premier interstate mutual aid mechanism, the Department of Homeland Security announced the rollout of the National Incident Management System (NIMS) which is intended to define a single comprehensive national approach to emergency and disaster prevention, preparedness, response and recovery. The overarching objective of NIMS is to ensure that all levels of government and the private sector are able to work together and communicate effectively. One of the main components of NIMS is mutual aid. All state and local governments are required to have mutual aid agreements in place by the end of fiscal year 2006 in order to be eligible to receive federal funding in the future. States that are members of EMAC are ahead of the curve in the area of interstate mutual aid requirements by the federal government. At least 26 states have intrastate (local-to-local jurisdiction) mutual aid agreements in place and eight states are proposing such agreements be established. To date, approaches to implementing intrastate mutual aid have varied with 16 states making participation voluntary. Twelve states have mandated local mutual aid agreements through state statute and seven states require participation as a requirement for state/federal funding. The majority of agreements are cross-discipline allowing all first responders to participate i.e. fire, law enforcement, emergency medical services and others as determined appropriate by the participating mutual aid partners. The National Emergency Management Association (NEMA) developed the National Model Intrastate Mutual Aid Legislation in 2004 and made it available to interested state and local governments. The model intrastate mutual aid agreement is based on EMAC and includes critical mutual aid provisions related to reimbursement, liability and workers compensation – all recommended in the NIMS document for inclusion in such agreements. Even those states with local mutual aid agreements already in place are now reviewing them against the national model and making revisions as needed to meet new requirements established through NIMS. At least 10 states plan to introduce the NEMA developed model into their 2005 state legislative sessions. Notes 1 2

National Emergency Management Association. The White House, Homeland Security Presidential

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EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT Directive #5 – Management of Domestic Incidents (Washington, D.C.: The White House, February 2003). http:// www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/02/20030228-9.html. 3 Department of Homeland Security, National Response Plan, (Washington, D.C.: Department of Homeland Security, 2004).

National Emergency Management Association. If Disaster Strikes Today—Are You Ready to Lead? A Governor’s Primer on All-Hazards Emergency Management, (Lexington, KY: The National Emergency Management Association, 2002).

References

About the Author

National Emergency Management Association Web site http://www.nemaweb.org. Emergency Management Assistance Compact Web site http://www.emacweb.org. National Emergency Management Association. NEMA 2004 Biennial Report: Organizations, Operations and Funding for State Emergency Management and Homeland Security (Lexington, KY: National Emergency Management Association).

Trina R. Sheets is the executive director of the National Emergency Management Association, an affiliate of The Council of State Governments. She is responsible for organization management, strategic planning, tracking and reporting on national policy issues relating to emergency management and homeland security. Sheets is the author of several national emergency management and homeland security articles and publications.

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Table A STATE EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT: AGENCY STRUCTURE, BUDGET AND STAFFING State or other jurisdiction

Position appointed

Appointed/ selected by

Reports to

Agency operating budget FY 2004 ($ in thousands)

Organizational structure

Full-time employee positions

Alabama ........................ Alaska ............................ Arizona .......................... Arkansas ....................... California ......................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

G G ADJ G G

G ADJ ADJ G G

Governor’s Office Adjutant General/Military Department Adjutant General/Military Department Department of Emergency Management Governor’s Office

$900 2,223 1,349 1,183 159,683

63 52 50 77 459

Colorado ....................... Connecticut ................... Delaware ....................... Florida ........................... Georgia ..........................

… ★ ★ ★ ★

CS G SPS G G

ED C HSD G HSD

Department of Local Affairs Emergency Management/Homeland Security Safety & Homeland Security Agency Department of Community Affairs Homeland Security Agency

595 120 950 280,000 3,000

27 70 35 134 100

Hawaii ........................... Idaho .............................. Illinois ............................ Indiana .......................... Iowa ...............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

ADJ ADJ G G G

ADJ ADJ G G ADJ

Department of Defense Governor’s Office/Military Division Governor’s Office Governor’s Office Department of Public Defense

1,500 1,302 30,000 987 2,800

40 38 267 46 47

Kansas ........................... Kentucky ....................... Louisiana ...................... Maine ............................. Maryland ......................

★ ★ ★ ★

ADJ G ADJ EM G

ADJ ADJ ADJ ADJ ADJ

Adjutant General/Military Department Adjutant General/Military Department Adjutant General/Military Department Adjutant General/Military Department Adjutant General/Military Department

550 3,300 1,268 1,000 2,600

28 81 44 21 57

Massachusetts .............. Michigan ....................... Minnesota ..................... Mississippi .................... Missouri ........................

★ … ★ ★ ★

G CS G G ADJ

PSS SPS PSS G ADJ

Public Safety State Police Public Safety Governor’s Office Adjutant General/Military Department

3,368 4,200 2,903 930 3,000

70 75 59 67 69

Montana ........................ Nebraska ....................... Nevada ........................... New Hampshire ............ New Jersey ....................

… ★ ★ ★ ★

ADJ ADJ G SPS SPS

ADJ ADJ G PSS SPS

Adjutant General/Military Department Adjutant General/Military Department Public Safety Public Safety State Police

454 1,260 2,000 3,570 7,100

21 34 22 40 56

New Mexico .................. New York ....................... North Carolina ............. North Dakota ............... Ohio ...............................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

G G SPS ADJ G

PSS G PSS ADJ PSS

Public Safety Adjutant General/Military Department Public Safety Adjutant General/Military Department Public Safety

1,100 4,300 8,300 2,500 3,853

34 123 175 55 99

Oklahoma ..................... Oregon ........................... Pennsylvania ................ Rhode Island ................ South Carolina .............

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

G G G ADJ ADJ

G HS G ADJ ADJ

Governor’s Office Homeland Security Governor’s Office Adjutant General/Military Department Adjutant General/Military Department

680 10,000 17,000 645 950

32 34 162 20 49

South Dakota ................ Tennessee ...................... Texas .............................. Utah ............................... Vermont ........................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

PSS G HS PSS PSS

PSS ADJ HS PSS PSS

Public Safety Adjutant General/Military Department Governor’s Office Public Safety Public Safety

1,500 2,300 1,255 725 410

17 107 137 44 13

Virginia ......................... Washington ................... West Virginia ................ Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming .......................

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

G ADJ G G G

PSS ADJ PSS ADJ HSD

Public Safety Adjutant General/Military Department Public Safety Adjutant General/Military Department Governor’s Office

18,000 19,300 1,238 19,000 1,006

101 119 37 44 24

District of Columbia .... Puerto Rico ................... U.S. Virgin Islands .......

★ ★ ★

M G G

DM G ADJ

Department of Public Safety Governor’s Office Adjutant General/Military Department

2,000 3,600 576

39

Source: The National Emergency Management Association, December 2004. Key: ★—Yes …—No G—Governor GO—Governor’s Office ADJ—Adjutant General M—Mayor

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C—Commissioner HSD—Homeland Security Director/Secretary DM—Deputy Mayor PSS—Public Safety Secretary/Commissioner/Director SPS—State Police Superintendent/Commissioner CS—Civil Service PS—Public Safety HS—Homeland Security SP—State Police

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EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT

Table B STATE HOMELAND SECURITY STRUCTURES State homeland security advisor State or other Jurisdiction

Designated contact

Operates under authority of

Homeland security organizations Designated department/agency

Full-time employee positions

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Homeland Security Director Adjutant General EM Director EM Director Homeland Security Director

SS EO/SS GA GA EO

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

12 13 13 13 33

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

Public Safety Dir./Sec. Commissioner/EM/HS Homeland Security Director Public Safety Dir./Sec. Homeland Security Director

EO/SS EO/SS GA SS EO

★ ★ ★ ... ★

27 35 35 (a) (a)

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Adjutant General EM Director Special Assistant to Gov. Homeland Security Director EM Director

GA EO/SS GA SS GA/SS

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

4 38 8 3 23.5

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Adjutant General Homeland Security Director Adjutant General EM Director Homeland Security Director

GA EO EO/SS GA EO

... ★ ★ ★ ★

... 20 44 4 4

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Public Safety Dir./Sec. EM Director Public Safety Dir./Sec. Homeland Security Director Homeland Security Director

SS EO EO EO EO

... ★ ... ★ ★

... 9 ... 12 3

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

EM Director Lieutenant Governor Adjutant General EM Director Counter-Terrorism Ofc. Dir.

SS EO GA GA EO/SS

... ★ ★ ... ★

4 34 4 ... (a)

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Special Assistant to Gov. Homeland Security Director Public Safety Dir./Sec. EM Director State Police Superintendent

EO SS EO GA GA

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

4 73 14 55 5

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Homeland Security Director Homeland Security Director Homeland Security Director Public Safety Dir./Sec. State Police Superintendent

EO/SS EO EO GA SS

★ ★ ... (a) ...

12 2 4 (a) ...

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Homeland Security Director Homeland Security Director Homeland Security Director Public Safety Dir./Sec. Public Safety Dir./Sec.

GA EO EO/SS SS EO

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

3.5 19 5 40 7

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Special Assistant to Gov. Adjutant General Public Safety Dir./Sec. Adjutant General Homeland Security Director

EO/SS GA GA SS SS

★ ... ★ ★ ...

10 18 (a) 44 24.5

District of Columbia .......... U.S. Virgin Islands .............

Dep. Mayor, Public Safety Adjutant General

GA GA

(a) ★

(a) 2

Source:The National Emergency Management Association, December 2004. Key: ★—Yes …—No GA—Gubernatorial authority EO—Executive order SS—State statute HSD—Homeland Security Director AH—Agency head (a) Data not available.

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The Impact of Terrorism on State Law Enforcement By Chad Foster and Gary Cordner Traditionally, state-level law enforcement has represented about 10 percent of total police employment in the United States. In keeping with this employment level, state law enforcement has traditionally played an important, but relatively small role in the overall picture of policing America. The information collected for this project, however, indicates an expanding role for state law enforcement since 2001, partly due to new roles and responsibilities associated with homeland security, and partly because state police are filling gaps and vacuums created by shifts in federal law enforcement priorities. Thus, while it is true that all types of police agencies have been significantly affected post Sept. 11, it seems that state law enforcement agencies have been affected the most. In recent years, Arizona established the Arizona Counter Terrorism Information Center, a combined facility/information system that supports the analysis and sharing of law enforcement information. New York hired 120 new state troopers to guard critical infrastructure along the northern border. The state of Washington implemented an explosive detection canine program to provide additional security screening at terminals to its ferry system, the largest in the United States.1 These developments all suggest heightened roles for state law enforcement agencies since the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Not only are state police organizations taking on these new terrorismrelated responsibilities, they and their local counterparts are shouldering many new burdens because of shifting federal priorities. In 2004, The Council of State Governments (CSG) and Eastern Kentucky University (EKU) conducted a 50-state survey of law enforcement agencies and convened an expert work group to examine how these changing conditions are affecting police and their traditional duties and to form recommendations for states. As state policy-makers and legislators seek policy improvements, results from this terrorism-prevention study and recently drafted guidance may help them understand current conditions and strategic directions for the future.

State Law Enforcement— Yesterday and Today Today, general purpose state law enforcement agencies exist in all states but Hawaii. General purpose agencies or departments typically fall under the rubric of state police, state patrol or highway patrol departments. One of the oldest and most well-known state police organizations is the Texas Rangers, es532

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tablished in 1835.2 Most state agencies, however, are relatively new. The proliferation of the interstate highway system during the mid-20th century and the need for traffic safety and enforcement forced most states to establish or expand their state law enforcement agency. Although the structure and function of these agencies varies among states, similar characteristics exist. A common component of most state law enforcement agencies is a criminal investigation division. Roughly 50 percent of all states use a unified model or one that combines police/highway patrol function and investigation responsibilities into a single department. The other half of states have a separate bureau of criminal investigation that works independently or within the state attorney general’s office. In addition to highway safety and criminal investigations, general purpose agencies play many other lead and supporting roles in the states. For example, these agencies often provide states with: special weapons and tactics teams; search and rescue units; marine and aviation assets; crime labs; criminal history repositories; uniform crime reporting; statewide information systems; training for local law enforcement; and statewide communication, intelligence and analysis. According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics,3 there were roughly 700,000 full-time, sworn state and local law enforcement personnel in 2000. Within this total, state law enforcement agencies account for roughly 56,000 officers. The Federal Bureau of Investigation, on the other hand, employed just 11,523 special agents in 2000.4 Law enforcement numbers substantially increase at all levels of government, especially at the state and federal levels, once special jurisdictions with arrest and firearm authorities are considered (e.g., alcoholic beverage control, fish

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PUBLIC SAFEETY and wildlife, state park services). Local police departments and sheriffs’ offices provide the bulk of law enforcement services to rural communities. As with many other services, however, rural areas are severely constrained by the lack of law enforcement resources. In 1999, for example, 52.4 percent of all local law enforcement agencies employed less than 10 sworn personnel while 5.7 percent employed just one sworn officer.5 For this reason, state police departments often play enhanced roles in rural areas by providing critical support services to smaller local agencies. Generally speaking, state law enforcement agencies existed in a fairly stable environment prior to Sept. 11, fulfilling traditional roles. The catastrophic events on Sept. 11 served as a wake-up call to the nation regarding the threat of terrorism. More specifically, it appeared to create and shift responsibilities and paradigms among all layers of law enforcement.

Changing Roles and Responsibilities According to a 50-state survey by CSG and EKU in the spring of 2004, state law enforcement agencies are greatly involved in their state’s homeland security initiatives, and are being stretched thin today due to these new roles and changing federal priorities.6 Roughly 75 percent of state agencies say they either have a great amount of involvement or serve as their state’s leader in terrorism-related intelligence gathering, analysis and dissemination. In addition, more than 50 percent of state agencies report similar involvement in homeland security planning and coordination at the state level, conducting vulnerability assessments of critical infrastructure, providing protection for this infrastructure and dignitaries, and emergency response to terrorism-related incidents. How are these responsibilities affecting state police in terms of resource allocation? In comparison to the period before Sept. 11, more than 70 percent of state agencies report allocating more or much more resources for: security of critical infrastructure, special events and dignitaries; intelligence gathering, analysis and sharing; and terrorism-related investigations. Furthermore, at least 50 percent of state police organizations say more or much more resources have been allocated for: airport, border and port security; commercial vehicle enforcement; high-tech/ computer crime investigation; operational assistance to local agencies; and preventive patrols. These resources are likely generated from a number of possible sources; the survey results and inter-

views suggest three. First, more than 10 percent of state agencies report allocating fewer resources for traditional criminal investigation and drug enforcement following Sept. 11. Therefore, it is likely that some resources have been shifted internally among competing public safety problems and priorities. Interviews with state officials in 2004 support the conclusion that other crime fighting efforts have suffered as a result of new terrorism-related demands. This may be especially troublesome for states experiencing problems with other types of crime, such as synthetic drugs (e.g., methamphetamines, prescription drug abuse), new violent gang activities, identity theft and cybercrimes. Second, state police organizations are receiving funds and resources through a number of federal grant programs such as the State Homeland Security Program and Law Enforcement Terrorism Prevention Program. Although state law enforcement agencies will likely see a small portion of these funds, roughly $1.5 billion was allocated to states for these two programs in 2005.7 Third, interviews with state officials suggest they are simply doing more with less. For example, much of the overtime pay incurred during heightened levels of alert, participation on multijurisdictional task forces and working groups, and exhaustive planning and coordination have been absorbed internally. And, these new responsibilities come at a time when state police organizations, like local agencies across the country, face personnel shortfalls due to National Guard and reserve activations. How do state law enforcement measure against local agencies? In general, law enforcement relationships and responsibilities continue to be assessed and redefined at all levels, and will evolve due to the changing nature of terrorist threats, prevention needs and transforming operations and tactics. The survey results do suggest, however, that certain responsibilities are more state or local in nature. State agencies were more likely to report allocating more or much more resources to the following operational responsibilities: intelligence gathering, analysis and sharing; security for critical infrastructure, special events and dignitaries; and commercial vehicle enforcement. Conversely, local agencies were more likely to indicate allocating more or much more resources to community policing, drug enforcement and traditional criminal investigation.

Shifting Federal Priorities According to the 9/11 Commission Report in 2004, “the concern with the FBI is that it has long favored The Council of State Governments

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PUBLIC SAFETY

Table A: State Law Enforcement Agencies Officers assigned to respond to calls

Sworn officers Name of state agency

Total

Number

Percent of total

State population

Total

Sworn

Civilian

1,201 409 1,872 913 9,706

628 232 1,050 559 6,678

52% 57 56 61 69

437 155 782 330 6,046

70% 67 74 59 91

4,447,100 626,932 5,130,632 2,673,400 33,871,648

14 37 20 21 20

1 (9) 12 28 6

8 (20) 10 7 7

(6) 12 14 86 4

Colorado State Patrol ................................ Connecticut State Police ............................ Delaware State Police ................................. Florida Highway Patrol ............................. Georgia State Patrol ...................................

909 1,692 827 2,138 1,785

654 1,135 580 1,658 786

72 67 70 78 44

500 585 280 1,539 650

76 52 48 93 83

4,301,261 3,405,565 783,600 15,982,378 8,186,453

15 33 74 10 10

13 9 9 (3) (38)

13 11 7 (5) (10)

12 6 12 3 (50)

Hawaii (a) Idaho State Police ....................................... Illinois State Police ..................................... Indiana State Police ................................... Iowa State Patrol ........................................

510 3,792 1,941 599

292 2,089 1,278 455

57 55 66 76

258 939 570 443

88 45 45 97

1,293,953 12,419,293 6,080,485 2,926,324

23 17 21 16

94 6 3 28

52 5 6 5

207 7 (2) 311

Kansas Highway Patrol ............................. Kentucky State Police ................................ Louisiana State Police ................................ Maine State Police ...................................... Maryland State Police ................................

694 1,670 1,438 495 2,328

457 937 934 325 1,575

66 56 65 66 68

457 481 542 225 1,575

100 51 58 69 100

2,688,418 4,041,769 4,468,976 1,274,923 5,296,486

17 23 21 25 30

(8) (1) 17 4 (4)

(17) (5) 7 (4) (3)

17 5 43 24 (6)

Massachusetts State Police ........................ Michigan State Police ................................. Minnesota State Patrol .............................. Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol .......... Missouri State Highway Patrol ................

2,590 3,189 791 1,031 2,170

2,221 2,102 548 532 1,080

86 66 69 52 50

2,221 1,310 469 332 753

100 62 86 62 70

6,349,097 9,938,444 4,919,479 2,844,658 5,595,211

35 21 11 19 21

(10) 2 13 32 4

(13) (3) 13 (1) 8

15 12 11 102 0

Montana Highway Patrol .......................... Nebraska State Patrol ................................ Nevada Highway Patrol ............................. New Hampshire State Police ..................... New Jersey State Police .............................

280 640 597 389 3,682

205 462 414 315 2,569

73 72 69 81 70

175 382 414 237 1,297

85 83 100 75 50

902,195 1,711,263 1,998,257 1,235,786 8,414,350

23 27 21 25 21

1 0 14 17 1

(3) 0 10 29 (5)

15 2 22 (16) 18

New Mexico State Police ............................ New York State Police ................................ North Carolina State Highway Patrol ..... North Dakota Highway Patrol .................. Ohio State Highway Patrol .......................

649 4,948 1,810 193 2,552

525 4,112 1,416 126 1,382

81 83 78 65 54

350 2,439 1,133 92 1,151

67 59 80 73 83

1,819,046 18,976,457 8,049,313 642,200 11,353,140

29 22 18 20 12

(22) 6 3 4 7

21 4 3 5 (1)

(68) 21 6 2 17

Oklahoma Highway Patrol ........................ Oregon State Police .................................... Pennsylvania State Police .......................... Rhode Island State Police .......................... South Carolina Highway Patrol ...............

1,420 1,409 5,694 268 1,220

782 826 4,152 221 977

55 59 73 82 80

555 450 2,854 148 977

71 54 69 67 100

3,450,654 3,421,399 12,281,054 1,048,319 4,012,012

23 24 34 21 24

6 13 7 14 11

3 0 1 15 10

10 39 30 9 15

South Dakota Highway Patrol .................. Tennessee Department of Safety .............. Texas Department of Public Safety .......... Utah Highway Patrol ................................. Vermont State Police ..................................

233 1,715 7,025 441 513

153 899 3,119 397 304

66 52 44 90 59

0 800 1,880 257 239

0 89 60 65 79

754,844 5,689,283 20,851,820 2,233,169 608,827

20 16 15 18 50

2 10 4 10 15

(1) 17 9 12 5

8 3 1 (6) 35

Virginia State Police ................................... Washington State Patrol ............................ West Virginia State Police ......................... Wisconsin State Patrol ............................... Wyoming Highway Patrol .........................

2,511 2,145 1,044 665 295

1,883 987 681 508 148

75 46 65 76 50

1,464 689 502 340 133

78 70 74 67 90

7,078,515 5,894,121 1,808,344 5,363,675 493,782

27 17 38 9 30

12 4 15 (2) (2)

13 9 14 2 (2)

7 0 15 (14) (2)

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Percent of total

Percent change in employees, 1996–2000

Alabama Department of Public Safety .... Alaska State Troopers ................................ Arizona Department of Public Safety ..... Arkansas State Police ................................. California Highway Patrol ........................

Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Law Enforcement Management and Administrative Statistics, 2000: Data for Individual State and Local Agencies with 100 or More Officers NCJ 203350, 2000 LEMAS survey, March 2, 2004 Note: Personnel data are for full-time employees during the pay period that

Number

Officers per 10,000 residents

included June 30, 2000. Population data are Bureau of the Census figures for April 1, 2000. Number of officers per 10,000 residents excludes part-time employees. Numbers in parentheses indicate a negative percent change in number of employees. (a) Hawaii has no statewide law enforcement agency.

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PUBLIC SAFEETY

Table B: Operating Expenditures and Asset Forfeiture Receipts of State Law Enforcement Agencies, 2000 Estimated asset forfeiture receipts

Annual operating expenditure Name of agency

Total

Per employee Per officer

Alabama Department of Public Safety .... Alaska State Troopers ................................ Arizona Department of Public Safety ..... Arkansas State Police ................................. California Highway Patrol ........................

$87,377,852 54,674,300 123,655,000 58,486,323 917,355,000

$72,754 133,678 66,055 64,060 94,054

$139,137 235,665 117,767 104,627 137,370

$20 87 24 22 27

$420,000 142,190 2,440,824 218,383 1,467,323

$350 348 1,304 239 150

$669 613 2,325 391 220

Colorado State Patrol ................................ Connecticut State Police ............................ Delaware State Police ................................. Florida Highway Patrol ............................. Georgia State Patrol ...................................

66,223,000 116,645,912 67,895,100 141,237,296 112,846,027

72,733 68,940 81,214 66,060 62,849

101,258 102,772 117,061 85,185 143,570

15 34 87 9 14

282,028 1,073,540 600,933 1,649,453 2,082,929

310 634 719 771 1,160

431 946 1,036 995 2,650

Hawaii (a) Idaho State Police ....................................... Illinois State Police ..................................... Indiana State Police ................................... Iowa State Patrol ........................................

47,000,000 373,040,400 105,917,669 36,047,438

90,385 98,376 54,569 59,681

160,959 178,574 82,878 79,225

36 30 17 12

0 4,334,554 616,455 119,894

0 1,143 318 199

0 2,075 482 264

Kansas Highway Patrol ............................. Kentucky State Police ................................ Louisiana State Police ................................ Maine State Police ...................................... Maryland State Police ................................

24,720,000 125,000,000 126,863,639 41,000,000 250,681,088

35,517 74,850 88,222 82,828 107,681

54,092 133,404 135,828 126,154 159,163

9 31 28 32 47

942,252 500,000 757,194 20,000 563,000

1,354 299 527 40 242

2,062 534 811 62 357

Massachusetts State Police ........................ Michigan State Police ................................. Minnesota State Patrol .............................. Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol .......... Missouri State Highway Patrol ................

223,577,991 268,719,900 60,226,000 49,200,000 151,951,352

86,324 84,265 76,139 47,721 68,370

100,665 127,840 109,901 92,481 140,696

35 27 12 17 27

675,000 0 21,886 234,054 1,752,687

261 0 28 227 789

304 0 40 440 1,623

Montana Highway Patrol .......................... Nebraska State Patrol ................................ Nevada Highway Patrol ............................. New Hampshire State Police ..................... New Jersey State Police .............................

17,000,000 33,000,000 51,465,459 31,000,000 203,087,000

59,649 51,563 86,207 75,887 55,157

82,927 71,429 124,313 95,827 79,053

19 19 26 25 24

250,000 5,710,479 234,253 200,000 3,784,000

877 8,923 392 490 1,028

1,220 12,360 566 618 1,473

New Mexico State Police ............................ New York State Police ................................ North Carolina State Highway Patrol ..... North Dakota Highway Patrol .................. Ohio State Highway Patrol .......................

40,000,000 395,060,000 134,000,000 12,000,000 202,000,000

61,633 79,044 74,033 62,176 79,154

76,190 96,075 94,633 95,238 146,165

22 21 17 19 18

119,894 12,974,038 1,649,453 4,000 1,052,954

185 2,596 911 21 413

228 3,155 1,165 32 762

Oklahoma Highway Patrol ........................ Oregon State Police .................................... Pennsylvania State Police .......................... Rhode Island State Police .......................... South Carolina Highway Patrol ...............

86,148,417 190,000,000 511,795,000 37,724,490 55,910,979

59,971 134,847 89,883 140,763 45,829

110,164 230,024 123,265 170,699 57,227

25 56 42 36 14

1,476,833 131,957 4,042,325 232,600 1,161,184

1,028 94 710 868 952

1,889 160 974 1,052 1,189

South Dakota Highway Patrol .................. Tennessee Department of Safety .............. Texas Department of Public Safety .......... Utah Highway Patrol ................................. Vermont State Police ..................................

13,300,000 139,538,000 350,560,935 34,800,000 30,000,000

56,596 81,363 49,902 78,202 54,348

86,928 155,215 112,395 87,657 87,464

18 25 17 16 49

119,894 544,420 7,500,000 75,000 65,900

510 317 1,068 169 119

784 606 2,405 189 192

Virginia State Police ................................... Washington State Patrol ............................ West Virginia State Police ......................... Wisconsin State Patrol ............................... Wyoming Highway Patrol .........................

198,236,160 157,193,811 73,526,273 49,113,600 15,800,000

75,389 73,284 69,528 73,634 53,469

105,277 159,264 107,968 96,680 106,757

28 27 41 9 32

149,827,242 288,289 410,000 16,300 0

56,979 134 388 24 0

79,568 292 602 32 0

Source: Bureau of Justice Statistics, Law Enforcement Management and Administrative Statistics, 2000: Data for Individual State and Local Agencies with 100 or More Officers NCJ 203350, 2000 LEMAS survey,March 2, 2004. Note: Budget data are for the calendar or fiscal year that included June 30, 2000. Capital expenditures such as equipment purchases and construction costs are not included. Computation of per employee expenditure includes all

Per resident

Total

Per employee Per officer

agency employees with a weight of .5 assigned to part-time employees. Computation of per officer expenditure includes all sworn agency employees with a weight of .5 assigned to part-time officers. Computation of per resident expenditure is based on state population. In some cases, data are estimates provided by agency. (a) Hawaii has no statewide law enforcement agency.

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PUBLIC SAFETY its criminal justice mission over its national security mission.”8 In 2002, the FBI announced a reshaping of priorities to guide future activities, with the new number one priority being “Protecting the United States from terrorist attacks.”9 Shifting federal law enforcement priorities since Sept. 11 have forced state and local agencies to assume greater roles for those previously held federal responsibilities (e.g., financial crimes, bank robberies, organized crime, drug trafficking). These public safety and crime issues have not disappeared since Sept. 11, and state and local law enforcement agencies are obligated to address these deficiencies by assigning new personnel and shifting resources. Although the FBI may still be involved in these cases, they are much more selective today than before 2001.10 In addition to the strain on state resources, state officials are concerned that the shift by the FBI away from traditional crimes will cascade to the state and local levels, thus hindering efforts to screen and analyze possible precursor crimes for linkages to largerscale terrorist activities. There is a strong indication that a nexus exists among types of criminal activity, including illegal drug operations, money laundering, fraud, identity theft and terrorism.11

Where Should States Focus Future Efforts? CSG convened an expert work group in 2004 to explore these changing conditions and a broad range

of alternatives to improve terrorism prevention at the state level. As states develop strategies concerning prevention and to a lesser extent, emergency response, they should consider the following recommendations.12 Intelligence fusion centers and analysts. “Fusion centers are an integral part of a state’s strategy regarding the prevention of terrorism,” said Colonel Bart Johnson of the New York State Police. The centralization of intelligence sharing and analysis at the state level, through one physical center or network of facilities, provides a means to gather and analyze disparate networks of information more effectively and efficiently. Arizona was one of a handful of states to establish an information fusion center after Sept. 11. The Arizona Counter Terrorism Information Center is nationally recognized for providing tactical and strategic intelligence support to law enforcement officials across the state and for being uniquely located with the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force. According to the National Criminal Intelligence Sharing Plan released in 2004, “Analysis is the portion of the intelligence process that transforms the raw data into products that are useful...without this portion of the process, we are left with disjointed pieces of information to which no meaning has been attached.”13 Today,

Table C: Homeland Security Roles for State Law Enforcement State law enforcement agencies level of involvement in their state’s homeland security initiatives No involvement or very little involvement

Moderate involvement

Great amount or our agency is the leader

Source of homeland security announcements for the public ...........................

30.7%

35.5%

33.9%

Distribution of the state’s federal homeland security funding .........................

48.4

22.6

29.0

Coordinates homeland security activities in the state ......................................

16.1

30.7

53.2

Serves as state’s primary contact to DHS and other federal agencies for homeland security ....................................................................

32.8

27.9

39.3

Conducting critical infrastructure, key asset and vulnerability assessments ....................................................................................................

9.7

33.9

56.5

Homeland security training for law enforcement .............................................

16.1

38.7

45.2

Homeland security education/training for the public .......................................

51.6

25.8

22.6

Homeland security planning for the state .........................................................

11.3

27.4

61.3

Terrorism-related intelligence gathering, analysis and dissemination ............

4.9

19.7

75.4

Emergency response to terrorism-related incidents .........................................

16.4

27.9

55.7

Protection of dignitaries .....................................................................................

12.9

29.0

58.1

Protection of critical infrastructure ...................................................................

22.6

24.2

53.2

Source: The Council of State Governments and Eastern Kentucky University National Survey of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies, 2004. Note: Total state law enforcement population = 73; number of collected surveys = 61; survey response rate = 84 percent.

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PUBLIC SAFEETY terrorism and crime prevention missions require a much more proactive approach to identify terrorists before they act and interdict attacks that are occurring. To meet this new need, states should pursue specialized intelligence analysts and improved analytical tools. The Florida Legislature, for example, authorized more than 30 new intelligence analyst positions following Sept. 11 to address this need. Collaboration among law enforcement partners. “Terrorism prevention and response requires law enforcement agencies at all levels to work together, exchange information, train and coordinate efforts to a much greater extent than has ever occurred,” said Sheriff Al Cannon of Charleston County, South Carolina. The 9/11 Commission also recognized the importance of integrating law enforcement assets at all levels of government. They cite the nation’s 66 Joint Terrorism Task Forces as a model intergovernmental approach. According to the Commission, state and local law enforcement agencies “need more training and work with federal agencies so that they can cooperate more effectively with those federal authori-

ties in identifying terrorist suspects.”14 To foster intergovernmental cooperation, the work group recommends that states: draft and implement a statewide counterterrorism program for the law enforcement community; develop standardized training programs and tools; build partnerships with key residential, commercial property owners and security personnel and provide them with resources and tools to identify and report suspicious activities; and develop and implement a public education and outreach plan that establishes and formalizes public information policies and procedures that relate to terrorism prevention and response. Integration with the criminal justice system. Not only must state agencies work closely with their local and federal counterparts, they must integrate terrorism prevention responsibilities into the criminal justice system at large. “It’s now more important than ever to incorporate terrorism prevention into law enforcement’s toolbox of crime fighting programs,” said Representative John Millner of Illinois. Law enforcement officials generally agree that an association exists among types of criminal

Table D: States’ Allocation of Law Enforcement Resources Change in state law enforcement agencies’ allocations of resources since Sept. 11, 2001 Fewer or much fewer resources

No change

More or many more resources

Airport security ..................................................................................................

0.0%

44.1%

55.9%

Border security ...................................................................................................

0.0

50.0

50.0

Commercial vehicle enforcement ......................................................................

0.0

43.1

56.9

Community policing ...........................................................................................

0.0

75.6

24.4

Drug enforcement and investigation .................................................................

20.7

58.6

20.7

Forensic science/crime lab services ..................................................................

8.2

57.1

34.7

High tech/computer crime investigation ...........................................................

7.8

41.2

51.0

Intelligence gathering, anaylsis and sharing .....................................................

3.2

4.8

91.9

Investigation of local agencies ..........................................................................

3.9

88.2

7.8

Local agency operational assistance .................................................................

8.3

38.3

53.3

Port security ........................................................................................................

0.0

43.8

56.3

Preventive patrol ................................................................................................

3.8

37.7

58.5

Responding to calls for service .........................................................................

7.1

53.6

39.3

Security for critical infrastructure .....................................................................

1.9

3.7

94.4

Security for special events and dignitaries .......................................................

1.7

13.6

84.8

Terrorism-related investigations ........................................................................

1.7

23.3

75.0

Tranditional criminal investigation ...................................................................

13.3

78.3

8.3

Traffic safety .......................................................................................................

7.7

73.1

19.2

Source: The Council of State Governments and Eastern Kentucky University National Survey of State and Local Law Enforcement Agencies, 2004. Note: Total state law enforcement population = 73; number of collected surveys = 61; survey response rate = 84 percent.

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PUBLIC SAFETY activity and terrorism. “Some terrorist operations do not rely on outside sources of money and may now be self-funding, either through legitimate employment or low-level criminal activity,” says the 9/11 Commission.15 “Counterterrorism investigations often overlap or are cued by other criminal investigations, such as money laundering or the smuggling of contraband. In the field, the close connection to criminal work has many benefits.”16 Therefore, states should embrace an “all crimes” approach to terrorism prevention. This strategy ensures that possible precursor crimes are screened and analyzed for linkages to largerscale terrorist activities. Also, states should develop and implement protocols to leverage all criminal justice and regulatory personnel, resources and systems, including: local law enforcement; probation and parole officers; court documents such as pre-sentence investigations; and other state and local regulatory agencies. Governance and legal issues. The work group addressed a number of state-level governance, planning and legal issues affecting state law enforcement and general terrorism prevention duties. First, states should consider regional approaches for homeland security planning and operational purposes. Creating or realigning existing regions or zones helps to remove or reduce local jurisdictional barriers for operational purposes and may enhance the distribution of federal grants. States should also assign a principal point of oversight and review for homeland security through a legislative committee or multi-branch commission. In many states, disparate oversight is provided through individual disciplines and policy areas such as agriculture, military affairs, public health and public safety. Similarly, certain aspects of the homeland security mission should be codified into law, such as key terms and definitions, general duties and responsibilities for the primary state-level stakeholders, and strategic planning processes. Finally, as a condition of accepting federal funds, states should ensure that state and local agencies have plans in place to sustain newly acquired equipment and capabilities for the long term. Future homeland security grant proposals and initiatives, therefore, should sufficiently demonstrate these long-term obligations, strategies and plans.

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Today, state police organizations are taking many lead and supporting roles in the realm of terrorism prevention. They provide a critical information sharing and analysis capability at the state level and link between local and federal authorities. Their role is especially important in rural areas of states where resources are scarce. Thus, they provide a critical link among large and small local agencies. In addition, state troopers patrol the interstate and state highways and serve as “eyes and ears” for suspicious activities, and would play a critical role in managing mass evacuations and aid for disaster areas. State police continue to play important roles guarding border crossings, seaports, airports and critical infrastructure. Furthermore, their specialized services (e.g., SWAT, canine units, air and marine assets) are often requested at the local levels, and are important assets to deter, interdict and respond to acts of terrorism. State policy-makers should be informed about these changing conditions, as well as the risks that accompany them. For example, should drug enforcement resources be sacrificed at the expense of terrorism prevention? What new structures, capabilities, and resources benefit both responsibilities? Police organizations are becoming more proactive through new information-led policing initiatives and tools such as crime mapping. Can state-level fusion centers support these new general crime fighting initiatives? “The fact remains that the Sept. 11 terrorists lived and shopped in small towns across the country, frequented bars and other establishments in these small towns, rented cars and drove across states, and took flying lessons at small regional airports,” stressed Sheriff Cannon. “If not the state, then who should take the lead in establishing and maintaining the unprecedented cooperation required to prevent a future attack?” Today, a tremendous opportunity exists for states to leverage their law enforcement resources to prevent future acts of terrorism, and improve overall public safety.

Authors’ note: This project was supported by Grant No. 2003-DT-CX0004 awarded by the National Institute of Justice, Office of Justice Programs, U.S. Department of Justice. Points of view in this document are those of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official policies of the U.S. Department of Justice.

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Notes 1 The Council of State Governments and Eastern Kentucky University, National Study—The Impact of Terrorism on State Law Enforcement, 2004 (Through support from the National Institute of Justice). http://www.csg.org, keyword: protect. 2 Texas Department of Public Safety, “Historical Developments,” http://www.txdps.state.tx.us/director_staff/ texas_rangers. 3 Matthew J. Hickman and Brian A. Reaves, Law Enforcement Management and Administrative Statistics, 2000: Data for Individual State and Local Agencies with 100 or More Officers, (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2004), xiii. 4 Matthew J. Hickman and Brian A. Reaves, Federal Law Enforcement Officers, 2000, (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2001), 2. 5 Matthew J. Hickman and Brian A. Reaves, Law Enforcement Management and Administrative Statistics: Local Police Departments, 1999, (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2001), 2. 6 See note 1 above. 7 U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Fiscal Year 2005 Homeland Security Grant Program: Program Guidelines and Application Kit, 2.

8 National Commission on Terrorist Attacks, The 9/11 Commission Report, (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2004), 423. 9 The Federal Bureau of Investigation, “Facts and Figures 2003,” http://www.fbi.gov/priorities. priorities.htm. 10 See note 1 above. 11 Ibid. 12 Ibid. 13 Global Intelligence Working Group, The National Criminal Intelligence Sharing Plan, 2004 Global Justice Information Sharing Initiative, (Washington, D.C.: Office of Justice Programs), 7. 14 National Commission on Terrorist Attacks, The 9/11 Commission Report, (New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc., 2004), 390. 15 Ibid., 383. 16 Ibid., 424.

About the Authors Chad Foster is a public safety and justice policy analyst with The Council of State Governments. Gary Cordner, Ph.D., is a professor with the College of Justice & Safety at Eastern Kentucky University.

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EDUCATION

No Child Left Behind: A Perspective By Ken Meyer The bar has been raised in the United States and our system of public education must adapt to the new parameters of global competition. Public education in the United States has not necessarily declined; the rest of the world has caught up and is now providing a higher level of competition in the market place at all levels. The No Child Left Behind Act is meeting the challenge and has ushered in a new era in public education, focused on the fundamentals of accountability and results for schools all across the country. Introduction The Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) of 1965, known now as The No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB), while still young since its most recent reauthorization, is growing into a very dynamic piece of federal legislation, which characterizes the crucial link between the federal and state government cooperation and interrelationships. NCLB also promises to have a very positive impact on the education of all children in the United States as well as setting a high bar for educational proficiency and achievement for the rest of the world to follow. This federal/state partnership exemplifies the critical importance of meeting a national priority as set forth by the president and Congress through a strong cooperative effort at all levels of government. While not without controversy and even resistance, NCLB is already having a significant and positive impact all across the country. The achievement gap is beginning to narrow and overall achievement is now being scientifically measured, providing a critical tool in allowing new and dynamic instructional strategies to emerge and be developed to meet the challenges of competing in a global and highly technical economic environment of today and well into the future. The primary objective of NCLB is to assist states with the closure of the chronic nationwide achievement gap, which has consistently existed for decades between low income, predominantly minority students, and the more affluent mostly majority white students in the country as well as raise overall achievement in reading, math and science for all students. This gap also exists between the majority student population and the limited English proficient students as well as special needs children. For proper perspective it is important to understand why this issue has been elevated to the status of national priority. According to recent studies, U.S. high school aged students consistently lag far behind peers in other peer industrialized countries as well as young 540

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and growing capitalist economies in the very critical areas of math and science literacy and comprehension, the root of economic innovation and entrepreneurial expansion. As outlined over 20 years ago with the published report A Nation at Risk, in order to remain an economic leader in the future, the United States must improve educational skills in math and science. Signed into law on January 8, 2002, NCLB established a set of accountability criteria for states to follow in order to continue participation in the ESEA programs, most notably the significant level of Title I funding flowing to the states for disadvantaged students.

Major Accomplishments and Successes “Despite ongoing complaints, the federal No Child Left Behind Act has become implanted in the culture of America’s public education system.� Lynn Olson, Education Week, December 8, 2004 Often misunderstood and sometimes misrepresented, NCLB requires that every state establish its own set of academic performance standards against which all children in grades three through eight, and one time in high school, are to be tested. The states are then further required to set up a valid and reliable system of testing these students once a year for the purpose of gathering information to determine where there are significant problems, deficiencies and challenges and then directing resources to help solve those problems. The intended goal is to provide information to all stakeholders, including the public at large, on the condition of the level of effectiveness and success of all public schools in the country. As with any major reform effort, the challenge is in the details of implementing this law at the state level. In small print, NCLB is over 700 pages long and that does not include the voluminous regulations and guidance, which have been promulgated by the secretary of the U.S. Department of Education for the states to follow. Despite the challenges and problems encountered,

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EDUCATION however, with implementing the requirements of NCLB, to date every state is in compliance with this law and the culture of public education is slowly changing in this country to a system built on accountability and results (outputs), not just the amount of money being spent (inputs). This cultural shift is creating a dynamic new perspective on how children will be educated in this country well into the future. It is built on the premise that gathering solid information is the first step in identifying problems and then creating new solutions to the challenges of a changing world. Success is taking root. Northeast. Fourth-grader Tiajha Battles, determined to pass the first round of state tests, did everything she could to prepare for the tough exams, and the Foxfire School faculty (Yonkers) did everything they could to help. She stayed after school three times a week for extra tutoring. She came to class on Saturday. She worked with a reading specialist. Her mother attended workshops so she could learn to help her struggling child achieve. Across Yonkers, thousands of students like Tiajha have moved up the academic ladder as the district infused new programs to boost achievement for all students. The new programs have resulted in higher test scores and the closing of an academic achievement gap. Back in 1999, nearly two-thirds of the city’s African-American and Hispanic eighth-graders scored “1” on the state’s four-point grading scale in the statewide math exam. Today, one in five black and Hispanic students scored “1” on that test. At Foxfire, in 1999, one in four students scored in the lowest level on the state’s fourth-grade English exam. Today, that proportion plunged to one in 25. (The Journal News, 2/24/05) Northwest. Six Oregon elementary schools and one rural school district were recently heralded by the state as models for closing the achievement gap. The schools, including Beaver Acres Elementary in Beaverton and Vernon Elementary in Portland, each get $2,000 to spend as they please and will share their successful strategies during a second annual “Closing the Gap” conference next month. Beaver Acres got its Latino and low-income students to pass the state math test at rates higher than white students statewide. At Vernon, African-American and Latino students perform nearly as well as Oregon’s white students in reading and better than them in math. Several strategies were common to nearly all of the winning schools. They test students repeatedly during the year and act immediately on results, regrouping students, adding extra support, or changing curricula when necessary. They also set aside lots of

time for teaching reading and math—75 minutes of math each day at Beaver Acres and two hours in reading and writing every day at Vernon—and treat that time as sacred. Nearly every certified educator in the school teaches reading so that reading groups can be small and tailored to students’ particular level. (The Oregonian, 3/2/05) Southeast. Calcedeaver Elementary School in Mobile County, Alabama, has 100 percent of its kindergarten and first-graders reading at or above grade level—and that’s including special education students. Reading has improved drastically at Calcedeaver since August 2003, when the school adopted the Alabama Reading First Initiative. Students who participated in the program that first year read an average of 43 words per minute faster than students in the same grades did the year before, and, this year, many kindergarteners are reading on a second-grade level. Education officials say the Alabama Reading First Initiative and the better-known Alabama Reading Initiative, are proving their worth. Katherine Mitchell, the state’s Assistant Superintendent for Reading, said the programs “are one and the same, but we have to name them according to their funding [streams].” (Federal grants under the No Child Left Behind Act pay for Reading First.) Nine of Mobile County’s top 10 reading schools, with poverty levels averaging 85 percent in their student bodies, participate in one or both initiatives. (The Mobile Register, 2/27/05) Southwest. Before the 2003–2004 school year, reading and math proficiency measured by the New Mexico Standards-based Assessment forced Desert View Elementary School into a probationary status. But Desert View’s reading scores increased from 20 percent proficiency on the exam in 2002–2003 to 42 percent in 2003–2004, while math scores during the same period improved from 20 percent to 46 percent. The introduction of new teaching methods during the 2003–2004 school year prompted the striking improvements. And, the better scores have had a positive effect on the school. “You can see the uplifting of the instructional mood in the school,” said Assistant Principal Fernando Carrasco. “Teachers and kids are not afraid to tackle the test now.” And, in recognition of the turnaround, Principal Susan Yturralde and bilingual kindergarten teacher Lorna Clark flew to Washington, D.C., and were allowed to sit in the First Lady’s box as the president gave his State of the Union Address. (The El Paso Times, 2/4/05) While NCLB requires that every state create its own set of academic standards and system of testing against those standards, a further requirement is for The Council of State Governments

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EDUCATION every state to also participate in a random sampling of testing known as the National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP). This test is often referred to as “The Nation’s Report Card” as it gathers data from all across the country from every state and a reasonable comparison can be made between districts and states in terms of the level of success being achieved. This data also is collected and analyzed by education think tanks and other experts in psychometrics and education evaluation. According to Education Trust and the most recent state scores, the nation’s achievement gap is now beginning to close. NCLB is showing true signs of success.

Problems/Challenges Communication One of the biggest challenges which has confronted NCLB from its inception is the onerous task of communicating the intent of Congress and the specifics of the law to those most impacted by its implementation; educators, administrators and policy-makers. As such, very quickly after being signed into law, a great deal of misunderstanding, miscommunication and misinformation began to flow around the country regarding the true impact of NCLB at the state and local level creating a high level of tension across the country between policymakers and various constituent groups. This breakdown of communication, combined with the heightened level of political activism prior to and during a presidential election year created a very challenging environment for implementation of NCLB across the country. Any major reform in any law can cause anxiety. NCLB is no different. Technical NCLB requires that every child in the public school system in this country is to be tested once a year in reading, math and science in grades three through eight and one time in high school. These tests must be measured against a specific set of standards for each grade level as established by the state. For this purpose, students are not measured against their peers and placed in a percentage quartile on a bell curve, the measurement is against a state standard. Early on, this posed some of the most significant challenges for many states as each state, if not already in place, had to first create a set of standards and then create a valid and reliable system of testing against those standards. While there has been a lot of activity from education evaluators, think tanks and private vendors to accommodate the states’ needs in this area, the fact that every state has its own set of standards 542

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also means every state ultimately has a different set of tests. In the short run this caused a great deal of pressure on states as professional resources in this area were limited. Ultimately, with the guidance and assistance of the United States Department of Education, all 50 states created a system of accountability. Political/Philosophical Education has risen to the level of national debate in recent years due to the importance of the impact of education on the ability to compete in a global marketplace. This emphasis, however, has also created new debate in this country regarding the proper role of the federal government in the area of public education, which has historically been the primary responsibility of state and local governments. During the presidential election year of 2004, this debate rose to a level of national attention as a number of states, driven in part by political motivation, began to indicate a possible desire to not participate in, or opt-out of, the requirements of NCLB and actually forfeiting the significant funding associated with the law. These efforts generally grew out of the frustration state policy-makers were experiencing as they communicated with and received input from educators in their states and districts who were concerned about the impact of NCLB on their schools. A common theme began to emerge in some states which argued that the federal government had no right to dictate terms of public education at the local level. This argument evolved into a national debate of state sovereignty and resulted in the introduction of numerous resolutions and bills in state legislatures across the country expressing concern and discontent over the requirements of NCLB versus the level of funding associated with the requirements. However, although a few states took a serious look at pulling away from NCLB, in the end there was not one bill at the state legislative level which passed both houses and made it to a governor’s desk for signature into law. As state policy-makers became more familiar with the actual requirements of the federal law as well as the level of funding their respective states were receiving to implement the law, while not necessarily in full agreement with the provisions of NCLB, realized that the level of funding was too important for the benefit of disadvantaged children than to forego its acceptance. The debate will undoubtedly continue. Funding One of the most pronounced criticisms of NCLB and largely without merit is the question of funding.

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EDUCATION Many critics have claimed that NCLB is an unfunded or under-funded mandate from the federal government to the state governments. The philosophical debate notwithstanding, the facts are clear that NCLB is very well funded relative to the requirements of the federal law. Since the inception of NCLB, total funding for the program has grown to almost $24 billion, an increase of 65 percent from FY 2001 to 2006. It is important to view these funds in terms of what is actually being required of the federal law. For example, while creating smaller classrooms may be a worthwhile endeavor for a state, school or district, it is not a requirement of NCLB. What is required under NCLB, including testing, school choice transportation, supplemental services, professional development, etc., is well funded. When measured against the actual federal requirements, funding is very strong for NCLB. Furthermore, education funding in the United States has been and always will remain the primary responsibility of state and local governments. Any education program created by the federal government is intended to be supplemental to the overall effort, NCLB included. In addition, it is a grant program in which states may or may not choose to participate. As such, since it is voluntary on the part of states, it is incumbent upon state policy-makers to determine if the funding flow is adequate, relative to the requirements of the law. IDEA/Special Ed One of the biggest challenges in education has always been relative to providing instructional services to the special needs population, including those with the most severe cognitive limitations. As the special needs population has grown over the years, this has become of more significant concern to policy-makers. On April 7, 2005 Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings held a meeting of Chief State School Officers, invited from every state, to announce, among other things, a significant modification to the manner in which NCLB rules could potentially apply in the states to the special needs students across the country. The modified requirements of academic achievement for students with persistent academic disabilities and served under the IDEA requirements has been well received in the states and underscores the

Department of Education’s commitment to listen, gather information and then create rules which and allow states more latitude to deal with the most significant problems.

Summary Over the past several decades we have seen the dissolution of the Soviet Union and the emergence of many new free market economies and democracies across the globe. These new and growing economies are creating new challenges for the United States to maintain its prominence as the economic leader of the world. The world’s economies are now inextricably linked together in a digital framework where the factors of production are no longer necessarily limited by geography, time and distance. This new economic world is based on technology the fundamentals of which being an educated workforce proficient in the areas of reading, math and science and motivated by an entrepreneurial drive for success and excellence. The bar has been raised and our system of public education must adapt to the new parameters of global competition. Public education in the United States has not necessarily declined, the rest of the world has caught up and is now providing a higher level of competition in the market place at all levels. The No Child Left Behind Act is meeting the challenge and has ushered in a new era in public education focused on the fundamentals of accountability and results for schools all across the country. It is changing the culture of education. NCLB is empowering parents and arming them with valuable information about their childrens’ schools and providing them with choices and options regarding how to hold schools accountable for success so that future generations can enjoy the same opportunity for prosperity as preceding generations of Americans. NCLB is having a positive impact and the achievement gap is narrowing.

About the Author Ken Meyer is the deputy assistant secretary in the Office of Intergovernmental and Interagency Affairs, U.S. Department of Education. A graduate of the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, Meyer is a former state legislator and businessman in Tennessee. He was asked to join the Bush administration in 2002 and works for the development and implementation of the communication effort for No Child Left Behind.

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Issues in Faculty Salaries and Higher Education Financing By John W. Curtis This article provides an overview of several systematic factors contributing to the variation in faculty salaries. Institutional type is the most significant factor in determining faculty salaries overall; faculty members are also differentiated according to academic rank. Two other important factors are gender and region, and several individual factors are also identified. The article also discusses several policy issues related to the decline in state funding for higher education.

Faculty salaries, like much of American higher education itself, are widely differentiated according to several factors. The most significant sources of variation are institutional type (including both the level of degree offered and institutional affiliation) and academic rank. Two other important factors affecting salaries are gender and regional location. Finally, a number of factors affecting the salaries of individual faculty members are specific to each situation, even though commonalities can be observed across the spectrum. These individual factors include the faculty member’s discipline, record of publications and scholarship, the presence of collective bargaining, and race or ethnicity. This article provides an overview of the most salient differences in faculty salaries, as identified above, and points to trends which should be of particular interest to policy-makers. In addition, it situates the consideration of faculty salaries within the context of broader issues in public higher education. The source of primary data presented here is the annual Faculty Compensation Survey conducted by the American Association of University Professors (AAUP). The AAUP survey includes accredited institutions at all levels, both public and private. AAUP has collected and published faculty salary data in its “Annual Report on the Economic Status of the Profession” for nearly six decades. Table B reports average faculty salary at four-year institutions for academic year 2003-2004 by state, level and control of institution, and academic rank. (The AAUP collects data from Associate degree colleges as well, but the survey response for 2003-2004 did not provide sufficient cases for an accurate breakdown by state.) In comparing faculty salaries between states, the most important factor—and perhaps the most significant source of variation in faculty salaries overall—is institutional type. Institutional type itself can be divided into two components: the level of institution, categorized in the AAUP survey by highest degree; and the control of the institution, generally dis544

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tinguishing between public and private. Table A shows the variation in national average faculty salary by these two components of institutional type. Approximately 70 percent of full-time faculty in the United States are employed at public institutions. However, as Table A indicates, faculty salaries at private-independent four-year institutions are 8 to 28 percent higher than those at public institutions. (Private-independent Associate degree institutions, by contrast, are few in number and tend to compensate their faculty at lower levels.) Table A distinguishes between two categories of institutions that are often lumped together as “private”—those that are independent and those that are affiliated with a religious denomination. Faculty salaries at institutions in the latter category are generally lower, although the average for church-related doctoral institutions is pushed upward by a relatively small group of large research universities that pay higher salaries. By contrast, in Table B average salaries for private baccalaureate colleges in some states are depressed by combining private-independent and church-related colleges into one category, since the proportion of church-related colleges is much larger in some states and most church-related colleges are in the baccalaureate category. Tables A and B give an indication for the most current year of the primary issue of interest to state policy-makers: the divergence of faculty salaries between public and private sectors. At the national level, and in most states, faculty at public institutions receive lower salaries on average than do faculty at comparable private institutions. But this situation is not static. The AAUP annual report has followed the trend of public/private differentials for many years. As Ronald G. Ehrenberg summarized in a recent AAUP report: Several researchers have used AAUP data to document the decrease in the average salary of faculty members at public academic institutions relative to that of their peers at pri-

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Table A: Average Full-Time Faculty Salary 2003–2004, By Institutional Category and Control Public Average salary 2003–2004 Doctoral Master’s Baccalaureate Associate

$71,815 58,668 53,666 50,958

Private-Independent

Percent increase over 2002–2003 2.0% 0.5 1.4 0.4

Average salary 2003–2004 $91,865 63,252 63,236 39,168

Source: American Association of University Professors, Faculty Compensation Survey. Notes: Includes all full-time primarily instructional faculty, with or without academic rank.

vate institutions that took place between 19781979 and 2001-2002. Most of the decline occurred before the mid-1990s; the relative salaries of faculty in the public and private sectors remained roughly constant between 19961997 and 2001-2002. …[H]owever, average salaries in public institutions of higher education dropped this past year relative to those in private institutions.1 The public/private salary gap continued to widen in 2003-2004, as Table A indicates. The table shows the increase in average salary levels from 2002-2003, by institutional type. Overall, faculty salary levels at public institutions increased at or below the rate of inflation (measured at 1.9 percent from December 2002 to December 2003), while salary levels at private-independent institutions rose at substantially higher rates. Although these differences for a single year are small, the cumulative effect over time is stark: During the 1970-1971 academic year the average full professor at a private-independent doctoral university earned 10 percent more than his or her counterpart at a public doctoral university; by 20032004, that gap was 29 percent. Although average faculty salary alone is not a sufficient indicator of institutional quality, it seems selfevident to observe that, given substantial and widening differences in pay over time, public colleges and universities will have difficulty attracting and keeping the most productive and innovative scholars and teachers. This becomes a public policy issue if we wish to make high-quality higher education accessible to large segments of the public, and not only to those who can pay the cost of and gain admission to private universities and colleges. For the comparison of average faculty salaries between states, Table B also shows the important distinction between senior faculty members (holding the

Church-Related

Percent increaseover 2002–2003 2.9% 3.2 3.9 n.d

Average salary 2003–2004 $77,271 58,563 50,475 36,048

Percent increaseover 2002–2003 3.2% 2.4 2.8 n.d

Figures are weighted average (mean) salaries; salaries of faculty members on 12-month contracts have been adjusted to an academic year (9month) equivalent. n.d. = no data. There were too few responding institutions for meaningful analysis.

rank of professor) and generally entry-level faculty (assistant professors). Differences between states in average salary at either rank could indicate a disadvantage in attracting highly-qualified faculty, whether they be established scholars who bring immediate prestige and assume leadership of both scholarly projects and collegiate governance structures, or entry-level faculty who represent the potential for developing research and teaching. A number of researchers have investigated the continuing salary differences between men and women faculty, differences which cut across institutional type and academic rank. The AAUP has collected institution-level data on average salaries by gender since the mid-1970s. An analysis of those data indicates a remarkably persistent salary disadvantage for women faculty over more than a quarter century. When faculty of the same rank are compared, average salaries for women are 7 to 12 percent lower than those of men. The greatest differences are at the rank of full professor. There are some variations in this comparison by institutional type, as average salaries are more equal in baccalaureate and Associate colleges, and are generally more equal at public colleges and universities. However, it is also the case that women faculty are more likely to hold positions that have lower salaries on average: they are more likely than men to be at public community colleges, they are less likely to achieve the rank of professor, and they are less likely to have tenure. (Women are also more likely than men to hold part-time faculty positions, but the AAUP survey includes salary data only for full-time faculty.) As a result, when the weighted average salaries of all women full-time faculty are compared with all fulltime men, women receive only about 80 percent of the salary of men. The AAUP data indicate that this has been the case since the late 1970s, with surprisingly little change in the overall figure. The Council of State Governments

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HIGHER EDUCATION The AAUP data allow only for comparisons of institutional averages. Other investigators have utilized individual-level data to attempt to determine whether gender differences in salary can be attributed to differences in the distribution of women faculty according to other professional characteristics. A recent analysis of 1998 data by the U.S. Department of Education considered some 13 factors that might contribute to the salary difference between men and women faculty.2 It concluded that, even when all of those factors are controlled in the analysis, men still earn 9.4 percent more than women, on average. Toutkoushian and Conley, in a recent comprehensive review and extension of various analytical models developed during the 1990s, found that progress appeared to have been made in narrowing the “unexplained” salary gap between men and women faculty—that not attributable to differences on observable factors—but that the gap remains at between 4 and 6 percent. As they point out, “[t]hese unexplained wage gaps are not only statistically significant, but are large in a practical sense especially when compounded over a woman’s career. These inequities persist across most institution types and fields, and thus we should not lose focus on the fact that more improvement in the situation for women is needed.”3 What many statistical analyses fail to investigate, however, are the reasons why women continue to be overrepresented in the situations that result in lower average salary, as noted above. That, too, is a critical policy issue that remains to be addressed, if women are to participate fully in the academic profession. Faculty salaries also vary by geographic region. The AAUP data, divided into nine regions, indicate that the highest overall average faculty salaries are found in New England,4 a region dominated by private higher education institutions, and the Pacific,5 heavily influenced by relatively high salaries in California. An analysis of regional salary trends over time indicates that the regional differences have also been widening. Growth in average salaries over the last 25 years has been most rapid in New England and in the South Atlantic,6 with salaries in the latter region falling generally into the middle range nationally. Salary growth in the Middle Atlantic region7 has also generally kept pace, while faculty salaries in the East North Central8 and, especially, East South Central9 regions have fallen further behind. The latter two regions are characterized by more public institutions, especially at the doctoral level, reflecting the public-private salary disparities discussed above. In addition to the broad differences in faculty salaries by categories discussed above, salaries for indi546

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vidual faculty members also vary according to a number of specific aspects of the individual situation. In recent years, salary differences between faculty in different disciplines have emerged as a recurring topic for discussion, with the influence of “the market” often cited as the force driving widening disparities even within the same institution. Faculty in fields such as business, engineering or computer technologies, whose skills have been in demand in the private sector, have frequently been able to secure higher salaries than their colleagues in the humanities and social sciences. Analyses such as the two individual-level studies cited previously have also concluded that faculty members with a more substantial record of publications and scholarship earn higher salaries, even when other factors are taken into account. This likely reflects the continuing premium accorded to research among the several roles of faculty, an emphasis that appears to apply to faculty even in predominantly teaching institutions. Faculty salaries are also affected by the presence of collective bargaining, although a comprehensive recent analysis of the net impact of collective bargaining remains to be done. On the one hand, faculty collective bargaining may lead to higher salary levels for the faculty as a whole, and may lessen inequities within the compensation system; on the other hand, collective bargaining may act to preserve aspects of faculty self-governance and peer review, which can reinforce the differences by discipline and rank discussed above. Finally, the existence of systematic differences in faculty salary by race or ethnicity is a controversial topic, on which there is not conclusive evidence. The U.S. Department of Education analysis referenced above concluded that “…some racial/ethnic differences [in salary] existed in 1998. Compared with White faculty, Asian/Pacific Islander faculty had higher average salaries, were more likely to hold advanced degrees, and had greater representation at public doctoral, research and medical institutions. Black faculty had lower average salaries and were less likely to have advanced degrees or attain tenure or full professorship than White faculty.”10 However, the analysis concluded that when all factors were considered simultaneously, racial or ethnic category did not represent a statistically significant source of differences in faculty salaries. In recent years, the issue of faculty compensation has increasingly been linked to other trends in higher education financing. Although space does not allow for a full consideration of these issues here, it is important to include them in order to place faculty salaries in their proper context.

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HIGHER EDUCATION The fundamental challenge facing higher education in the last few years has been a withdrawal of public funding. This has happened both directly and indirectly and at both state and federal levels. Direct funding of public higher education institutions from state sources has not kept pace with rising overall costs, so that states are now providing a smaller percentage of institutional revenues than ever before. According to figures compiled by the U.S. Department of Education, in FY 2001 state and local governments supplied 40 percent of current-fund revenues for public higher education institutions, down from 49 percent only 20 years previously.11 And this figure is much lower at large research universities, where the proportion of state support now frequently falls below 20 percent. Faced with a decline in state revenues, public institutions have raised tuition at an accelerated pace. Some observers have portrayed this as a shift to a “high tuition/high aid” model, in which rising tuition prices would be met with increased levels of financial aid, so that students with financial need would not be denied access to college. It does not appear that student financial aid has kept pace with increased tuition prices, however. The largest federal source of student financial aid is the Pell Grant program. The maximum Pell award has remained flat for several years, so that needy students must find additional sources for more of their tuition bills. At the same time, many states and institutions have shifted funding for student aid programs from need-based to merit-based awards. As Donald E. Heller notes, merit based awards increased from 9 percent of state grants awarded without consideration of need in 1981 to nearly 25 percent of those awards in 2001. And at the same time, non-need-based aid increased to 44 percent of all grant aid.12 Thus, rising tuition prices threaten the ability of lowincome students to afford higher education, because need-based financial aid has not kept pace with tuition increases. Nor have tuition revenues fueled higher faculty salaries. As reported in the AAUP’s 2003-2004 Annual Report on the Economic Status of the Profession, average faculty salaries have not kept pace with increasing tuition prices over the last 25 years. The report compared faculty salary data from the AAUP annual survey with figures on tuition from the College Board’s annual report Trends in College Pricing. It concluded: The bottom line is that although faculty

and staff salary increases obviously contribute to increases in tuition, other factors have played more important roles during the last quarter century. These factors include the escalating costs of benefits for all employees, reductions in state support of public institutions, growing institutional financial-aid costs, expansion of the science and research infrastructure at research universities, and the increasing costs of information technology. If tuition and fee increases had been held to the rate of average faculty salary increases during this period, average tuition and fees would be substantially lower today in both the public and private sectors.13 Seen in this broader context, rising tuition prices are a consequence of the trend also producing increased disparities in faculty salaries between public and private institutions: a withdrawal of public funding. If, at the same time, needy students do not receive aid sufficient to match increased tuition prices, enrollment patterns may shift as well. This complicated matrix points toward a single outcome, if trends remain on the same course: higher education will become increasingly differentiated in terms of quality, and will be increasingly less accessible to financially disadvantaged students—reversing four decades of developments in the American system of public higher education. There are several thousand institutions of higher education in the United States, reflecting the wide variety of institutional traditions, missions and resources that is a central feature of the American system. Faculty in these institutions fill a number of roles and bring differing professional qualifications to their positions; with more than 600,000 full-time faculty employed in different institutional situations across the country, the variation in faculty salaries is tremendous. This article has provided an overview of the key factors differentiating faculty salaries. It has also identified critical issues facing state government policy-makers with regard to their public higher education sectors: the long-term decline in faculty salaries at public institutions, relative to those at private institutions; disadvantages for women faculty; and the consequences of a withdrawal of state funding for both quality and accessibility at public colleges and universities. States look to their higher education institutions to provide high-quality education in a range of rapidly changing fields of endeavor, as centers of innovation in science and technology, and as sources of solutions to pressing social needs. As enrollments continue to grow, and the need for expanded access The Council of State Governments

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HIGHER EDUCATION to high-quality higher education becomes increasingly apparent, state policy-makers must identify sufficient resources to allow their higher education sectors to meet these new demands.

Notes 1 Ronald G. Ehrenberg, “Unequal Progress: The Annual Report on the Economic Status of the Profession,” Academe 89, no. 2 (March-April 2003): 26. 2 U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. The Condition of Education 2002. (NCES 2002–025) Washington, DC: 103. 3 Robert K Toutkoushian and Valerie Martin Conley. “Progress for Women in Academe, Yet Inequities Persist: Evidence from NSOPF: 99,” Research in Higher Education 46, no. 1 (February 2005): 1-28. 4 New England: Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont and Rhode Island. 5 Pacific: Alaska, California, Guam, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington. 6 South Atlantic: Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Maryland, North Carolina, Puerto Rico, South Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia. 7 Middle Atlantic: New Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania. 8 East North Central: Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin. 9 East South Central: Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi and Tennessee.

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10

Condition of Education 2002, 103 Figure for FY 2001 from U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. Enrollment in Postsecondary Institutions, Fall 2001 and Financial Statistics, Fiscal Year 2001 (NCES 2004–155) Washington, DC: 57. Figure for FY 1981 from U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. Digest of Education Statistics 2003. (Available online at http:// www.nces.ed.gov/programs/digest/d03_tf.asp) Table 334. 12 Donald E. Heller, “The Changing Nature of Financial Aid,” Academe 90, no. 4 (July-August 2004): 36-38. 13 Ronald G. Ehrenberg, “Don’t Blame Faculty for High Tuition: The Annual Report on the Economic Status of the Profession,” Academe 90, no. 2 (March-April 2004): 30. 11

About the Author John W. Curtis is director of research at the American Association of University Professors in Washington, D.C. He holds a Ph.D. in sociology from Johns Hopkins University, and has worked at colleges and universities in the United States, Germany and Kenya.

Note Opinions expressed in this article are those of the author, and not of the AAUP.

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Table B AVERAGE FULL-TIME FACULTY SALARY IN FOUR-YEAR INSTITUTIONS 2003–2004, BY STATE, INSTITUTIONAL CONTROL, INSTITUTION CATEGORY, AND ACADEMIC Public Master’s Assoc. Asst.

Prof.

Doctoral Assoc. Asst.

All

Prof.

Baccalaureate Assoc. Asst.

United States ................

94,498

66,194

56,247

71,815

74,911

59,407

49,870

58,668

68,788

55,831

46,293 53,666

Alabama ........................ Alaska ............................ Arizona .......................... Arkansas ....................... California ......................

82,413 72,356 88,910 81,900 112,304

61,045 56,908 61,979 61,036 71,683

51,135 48,547 54,857 53,160 61,634

63,946 55,706 69,757 63,950 89,475

65,172 70,325 85,654 66,307 83,503

53,476 55,351 65,651 56,335 67,574

46,210 48,253 52,326 46,262 55,174

51,343 53,817 61,305 51,237 69,736

... ... ... 61,130 85,362

... ... ... 52,717 74,348

... ... ... ... ... ... 42,662 46,818 67,114 67,225

Colorado ....................... Connecticut ................... Delaware ....................... Florida ........................... Georgia ..........................

89,571 106,660 105,821 88,609 101,064

66,907 76,330 73,390 63,393 68,381

56,838 61,731 60,060 54,998 59,938

72,186 83,684 79,385 66,653 75,777

78,220 78,966 71,262 75,938 69,758

59,936 61,116 59,119 59,540 55,706

53,552 50,990 50,113 51,430 46,662

57,989 64,091 56,672 57,092 53,345

62,213 ... ... 74,047 63,775

50,537 ... ... 58,249 54,058

43,859 46,783 ... ... ... ... 43,932 57,755 44,382 49,924

Hawaii ........................... Idaho .............................. Illinois ............................ Indiana .......................... Iowa ...............................

86,516 70,733 94,618 92,382 96,620

64,908 56,731 65,936 65,365 68,386

55,465 48,101 56,559 54,633 58,674

69,709 57,328 71,181 70,263 75,426

... 63,523 73,152 75,615 78,414

... 53,169 59,100 60,470 60,778

... 45,320 48,874 50,198 51,478

... 50,64 55,096 56,204 60,703

66,993 53,780 ... 68,771 ...

56,403 45,083 ... 56,115 ...

46,320 55,150 36,097 43,734 ... ... 44,484 50,675 ... ...

Kansas ........................... Kentucky ....................... Louisiana ...................... Maine ............................. Maryland ......................

81,959 88,547 84,788 72,467 106,677

60,985 63,103 61,722 61,566 73,576

51,744 53,399 53,359 48,494 63,817

64,517 69,382 60,994 59,673 80,254

68,394 70,311 62,377 75,913 78,108

55,261 56,159 52,506 58,500 62,002

45,519 48,166 44,661 46,629 51,894

53,712 52,738 48,390 59,259 57,845

... ... 48,256 57,434 93,890

... ... 42,634 47,730 73,493

... ... ... ... 34,807 40,498 39,831 47,950 59,663 77,730

Massachusetts .............. Michigan ....................... Minnesota ..................... Mississippi .................... Missouri ........................

89,190 100,220 102,012 75,354 89,857

70,784 71,379 69,879 58,977 64,145

57,854 58,971 60,585 50,081 53,195

73,812 76,258 83,407 57,786 68,404

80,735 75,056 74,676 53,362 65,119

63,757 60,609 61,370 49,742 52,562

55,118 50,772 50,008 42,300 44,125

68,096 58,725 60,605 44,940 51,156

65,558 ... 72,836 54,958 62,598

53,473 ... 55,819 49,220 50,058

43,601 ... 47,265 43,064 42,627

Montana ........................ Nebraska ....................... Nevada ........................... New Hampshire ............ New Jersey ....................

69,490 90,872 94,769 90,603 112,533

53,817 65,381 71,457 68,483 79,908

47,231 56,156 54,990 56,054 63,592

55,381 72,417 71,647 74,121 87,110

59,286 68,722 ... 68,786 92,679

48,028 56,876 ... 55,083 72,745

45,940 48,343 ... 45,997 57,584

47,665 55,438 ... 57,456 73,906

58,197 60,596 ... ... 90,986

50,051 44,768 ... ... 71,433

43,978 49,192 39,848 48,096 ... ... ... ... 54,187 71,809

New Mexico .................. New York ....................... North Carolina ............. North Dakota ............... Ohio ...............................

78,046 100,562 95,846 68,178 91,074

59,580 72,689 68,141 56,646 64,833

51,199 60,232 58,478 50,167 53,225

62,252 78,386 72,325 53,666 68,399

58,294 83,789 74,959 ... 76,575

48,728 65,509 59,559 ... 60,499

42,889 52,859 51,852 ... 50,119

46,333 65,465 57,613 ... 63,941

... 81,317 65,300 52,834 64,765

... 62,593 53,440 44,564 55,173

... 52,287 48,540 40,061 42,691

... 62,652 53,057 40,318 51,488

Oklahoma ..................... Oregon ........................... Pennsylvania ................ Rhode Island ................ South Carolina .............

81,086 79,232 104,271 86,043 86,455

58,405 60,524 72,391 62,804 63,028

50,022 51,752 61,070 55,950 55,984

61,536 60,066 75,164 74,578 67,576

59,312 58,590 86,705 65,374 64,892

50,432 48,482 69,859 55,204 54,377

44,724 40,662 57,105 48,101 45,190

48,352 47,777 66,691 57,711 52,848

52,536 55,646 77,603 ... 60,936

45,992 47,874 62,457 ... 52,349

37,862 41,056 51,991 ... 43,510

42,648 46,900 56,177 ... 48,680

South Dakota ................ Tennessee ...................... Texas .............................. Utah ............................... Vermont ........................

69,137 86,088 93,741 83,166 82,762

54,422 64,070 63,571 58,938 62,980

45,909 53,440 57,199 52,109 52,064

52,586 65,944 69,233 64,866 60,313

67,141 67,245 67,902 62,039 ...

54,979 53,347 56,069 49,599 ...

48,722 45,460 48,142 42,443 ...

55,481 53,652 53,251 49,268 ...

59,737 ... 70,646 ... 54,919

51,587 ... 54,967 ... 46,562

45,535 47,626 ... ... 46,957 51,324 ... ... 36,729 46,921

Virginia ......................... Washington ................... West Virginia ................ Wisconsin ...................... Wyoming .......................

99,708 89,611 75,755 93,283 77,708

68,949 64,191 58,849 68,747 58,574

56,296 59,997 47,707 60,468 55,432

73,872 70,438 60,075 77,314 61,910

67,059 65,103 61,997 66,864 ...

56,859 52,856 49,797 54,843 ...

47,590 45,621 40,764 47,534 ...

54,886 52,911 50,947 56,045 ...

73,854 ... 58,635 ... ...

57,068 ... 48,319 ... ...

44,845 56,632 ... ... 40,536 46,476 ... ... ... ...

District of Columbia .... Puerto Rico ...................

... ...

... ...

... ...

... ...

... ...

... ...

... ...

... ...

... 56,408

... 47,786

... ... 39,258 48,158

State or other jurisdiction

All

Prof.

All

57,601 ... 58,583 44,711 48,690

See footnotes at end of table.

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AVERAGE FULL-TIME FACULTY SALARY IN FOUR-YEAR INSTITUTIONS 2003–2004, BY STATE, INSTITUTIONAL CONTROL, INSTITUTION CATEGORY, AND ACADEMIC RANK – Continued

State or other jurisdiction

Private Master’s

Doctoral Prof.

Assoc.

Asst.

All

Prof.

United States .................

118,735

76,740

66,039

88,308

79,130

61,237

Alabama ......................... Alaska ............................. Arizona ........................... Arkansas ........................ California .......................

... ... ... ... 122,226

... ... ... ... 82,095

... ... ... ... 69,488

... ... ... ... 95,693

68,459 ... ... ... 90,600

Colorado ........................ Connecticut .................... Delaware ........................ Florida ............................ Georgia ...........................

88,239 138,830 ... 97,240 126,457

66,959 78,450 ... 63,961 81,124

55,354 68,935 66,514 102,291 ... ... 57,362 69,088 72,325 96,945

Hawaii ............................ Idaho .......................... . . . Illinois ............................. Indiana ........................... Iowa ................................

... ... 124,460 116,508 ...

... ... 77,585 77,304 ...

... ... 67,640 65,990 ...

Kansas ............................ Kentucky ........................ Louisiana ....................... Maine .............................. Maryland .......................

... ... 100,161 ... 111,770

... ... 69,662 ... 78,209

Massachusetts ............... Michigan ........................ Minnesota ...................... Mississippi ..................... Missouri .........................

132,507 ... 78,936 ... 110,386

Montana ......................... Nebraska ........................ Nevada ............................ New Hampshire ............. New Jersey .....................

Prof.

Assoc.

50,289

61,115

72,617

55,290

46,002 56,472

53,812 ... ... ... 67,611

46,758 ... ... ... 55,791

54,561 ... ... ... 69,585

67,659 ... 70,560 58,881 90,624

55,288 ... 59,698 48,453 66,064

43,547 ... 46,585 42,497 53,314

55,485 ... 54,267 49,318 72,303

... 90,347 ... 76,997 77,149

... 66,328 ... 57,698 57,851

... 55,326 ... 48,432 47,991

... 69,212 ... 59,212 57,300

90,453 91,737 59,338 63,292 64,173

64,710 68,524 51,519 53,163 52,662

51,400 52,922 42,157 46,508 42,584

70,484 70,460 49,979 51,588 50,640

... ... 91,556 92,508 ...

... ... 67,766 70,574 80,181

... ... 57,744 55,229 56,517

... ... 47,805 45,564 48,926

... ... 56,720 54,359 61,452

61,878 ... 64,339 66,212 62,506

55,497 ... 52,248 52,172 51,027

44,398 ... 44,524 46,611 43,579

50,425 51,627 54,813 51,421

... ... 61,099 ... 63,223

... ... 74,512 ... 81,800

52,452 65,342 82,820 65,735 79,522

48,414 56,261 59,101 55,286 61,025

46,710 48,081 47,518 44,589 51,709

47,436 60,522 59,271 50,166 60,497

46,587 56,861 57,616 92,147 69,145

39,425 47,588 48,671 64,340 56,107

34,999 41,144 40,969 51,925 45,637

38,821 48,405 48,706 68,358 56,805

82,236 ... 64,745 ... 70,493

73,255 ... 54,879 ... 61,506

99,513 ... 64,426 ... 82,064

92,571 58,768 70,704 61,217 66,900

69,095 49,067 53,273 53,023 54,510

58,533 41,085 42,118 41,677 46,557

70,325 47,372 49,968 48,164 55,068

93,264 64,463 73,661 69,855 56,605

66,196 52,782 56,162 52,284 48,797

53,956 44,418 47,054 46,498 42,290

72,486 54,140 57,488 52,933 46,808

... ... ... 117,957 134,425

... ... ... 81,417 77,263

... ... ... 67,851 64,634

... ... ... 94,755 98,287

... 82,462 ... 70,411 80,337

... 60,156 ... 55,350 67,477

... 49,044 ... 48,756 51,661

... 58,153 ... 58,385 66,070

48,599 57,286 ... 64,850 66,328

38,285 45,963 ... 53,479 52,561

34,761 40,942 ... 44,704 43,911

42,434 46,365 ... 53,420 53,295

New Mexico ................... New York ........................ North Carolina .............. North Dakota ................ Ohio ................................

... 117,529 128,604 ... 106,940

... 78,977 85,354 ... 75,408

... ... 66,785 88,585 74,642 103,948 ... ... 64,909 83,257

... 81,744 80,389 ... 75,958

... 64,540 61,474 ... 56,883

... 53,718 47,358 ... 48,822

... 64,024 60,754 ... 57,59

60,002 84,301 59,808 44,957 68,933

48,718 62,326 47,800 41,442 55,550

43,289 50,103 40,749 39,202 46,116

50,705 64,076 47,391 40,354 55,875

Oklahoma ...................... Oregon ............................ Pennsylvania ................. Rhode Island ................. South Carolina ..............

... ... 120,785 116,912 ...

... ... 82,623 73,695 ...

... ... 75,014 65,518 ...

... ... 94,851 93,930 ...

74,344 77,001 84,897 77,453 ...

55,137 59,328 65,407 57,806 ...

46,846 48,918 51,653 49,971 ...

55,538 60,448 62,821 55,107 ...

46,742 78,544 76,051 90,943 66,613

42,169 55,027 58,731 72,721 49,432

36,525 48,033 47,729 61,169 43,451

39,249 61,453 57,644 76,553 51,420

South Dakota ................. Tennessee ....................... Texas ............................... Utah ................................ Vermont .........................

... 117,125 101,681 ... ...

... 76,206 70,397 ... ...

... 64,336 62,871 ... ...

... 85,847 74,046 ... ...

... 60,414 72,694 ... 67,191

... 53,058 55,281 ... 54,535

... 44,187 45,725 ... 44,204

... 51,182 56,538 ... 57,480

55,464 57,878 59,395 68,014 87,210

47,239 45,944 52,165 56,981 60,522

40,324 39,638 41,893 48,564 53,648

44,334 45,366 48,881 55,680 66,750

Virginia .......................... Washington .................... West Virginia ................. Wisconsin ....................... Wyoming ........................

... ... ... 88,100 ...

... ... ... 66,118 ...

... ... ... 58,743 ...

... ... ... 66,439 ...

67,958 71,908 ... 59,200 ...

55,487 60,502 ... 49,045 ...

46,041 47,919 ... 42,363 ...

55,161 58,015 ... 47,155 ...

69,430 69,879 52,041 63,149 ...

53,845 54,409 46,257 52,229 ...

44,069 47,728 37,673 44,049 ...

55,037 57,077 43,747 51,425 ...

District of Columbia ..... Puerto Rico ....................

103,076 ...

72,199 ...

58,279 ...

76,894 ...

99,109 39,784

73,050 34,896

55,795 31,419

79,079 33,599

62,371 42,489

49,805 30,724

41,094 49,178 29,545 30,376

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Asst.

Baccalaureate All

Source: American Association of University Professors, Faculty Compensation Survey. More extensive tables and complete definitions are in “The Annual Report on the Economic Status of the Profession 2003-04” Academe 90, no. 2 (March/April 2004) Notes: “. . .” indicates no responses in that category. “Prof”=Professor; “Assoc”=Associate Professor; “Asst”=Assistant Professor; “All” includes all full-time faculty, with or without academic rank.

Assoc.

All

Data include full-time primarily instructional faculty only. Figures are weighted average (mean) salaries; salaries of faculty members on 12-month contracts have been adjusted to an academic year (9-month) equivalent.

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HEALTH CARE

Trends in Health Insurance Affordability By Jenny Sewell Exploding health care costs have created a health insurance affordability crisis in the United States. According to a Families USA analysis of U.S. Census Bureau data, roughly 81.8 million people under age 65, or one out of three, were without insurance for some or all of 2002 and 2003. Not only has the number of people without insurance increased, but even individuals who maintain their coverage have seen higher out-of-pocket expenses as employers and insurers have instituted additional cost-sharing mechanisms. Given the situation, it is not surprising that health care is a top priority for state policy-makers. As the 2005 legislative session begins, the search is on for solutions that will both stabilize health care spending and allow more people to access affordable insurance products. According to data from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, overall health care spending increased 9.3 percent in 2002 and 7.7 percent in 2003.1 While the 2003 figure represents the smallest rate of growth since 1997, it was still almost three percentage points greater than overall economic growth.2 This trend has put tremendous pressure on payers to find ways to cut costs. One solution has been to pass costs on to the employee. According to the Kaiser Family Foundation’s 2004 Employer Health Benefit Survey, 44 percent of small firms (three to 199 employees) and 83 percent of large firms (200 or more employees) thought it somewhat likely or very likely they would increase the amount employees pay for health insurance in the next year. When asked if they planned to increase deductibles in order to save on costs, 42 percent of small firms and 52 percent of large firms indicated that it was somewhat or very likely.3 An analysis of insurance premiums and out-ofpocket expenses supports this data. Between 2000 and 2004, average monthly worker contributions for single employees went from $28 to $47. For families, costs increased from $135 to $222. 4 And, even as employers have asked their employees to foot more of the bill, benefits covered by insurance plans have declined. This is especially true for employees in the highest income categories (over $60,000) who reported in a Commonwealth Fund survey that 56 percent had seen new limits on their health benefits.5 Monitoring these trends is critical for state policymakers, given the role employer-sponsored coverage plays in insuring Americans. In 2003, 175.3 million people in the United States were insured through their employers. This is greater than the number covered under Medicare, Medicaid, individual policies and military health care combined.6 Even small

changes in employer-sponsored coverage can affect a large number of people.

Making Health Insurance More Affordable Just as states and state laws governing insurance vary, so do state strategies to improve health insurance affordability. Reinsurance Several states are using reinsurance to support the health care insurance market and keep premiums low. Reinsurance is insurance for insurers—it helps lower an insurance company’s risk of having claims in excess of the amount paid in premiums. Lower risk means that a company can set premiums at a level that reflects what it usually costs to care for a plan member and not have to anticipate paying for those few who, because of accident, illness or disease, will cost significantly more. Two examples of state reinsurance programs are found in Arizona and New York. Arizona’s program, Healthcare Group of Arizona, is aimed at increasing the number of small businesses that offer employer-sponsored health care coverage (currently only 28 percent) by making plans less expensive. The state contracts with managed care organizations (MCOs) that then sell coverage to eligible small businesses. The state reinsures the MCOs for claims over $100,000 to protect them from the risk of high-cost medical cases and to assure financial stability. The state appropriates funds to pay for the program, which currently covers 11,200 individuals.7 The Healthy New York program reinsures participating HMO’s by covering 90 percent of claims between $5,000 and $75,000 per member per year. The program targets small businesses with low-wage workers and individuals with lower incomes, and it currently insures 40,000 people. Like Arizona, New York pays for this program through state appropriation.8 The Council of State Governments

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HEALTH CARE Medicaid Expansion Some states are also looking to insure more individuals by expanding public health insurance programs. For example, in 2002 the federal government approved a waiver submitted by New Mexico requesting permission to partially fund its State Coverage Initiative program using money from the state’s children’s health insurance program. New Mexico wants to create an affordable insurance product for employers who don’t currently offer coverage. Premiums will be financed through a combination of employer, employee, state and federal contributions.9 Also through a waiver, Maryland offers Primary Care, a program for adults with chronic illnesses who are not eligible for Medicaid but are enrolled in the state’s pharmacy assistance program. Services covered include office visits, diabetes treatment and maintenance drugs.10 Rhode Island has implemented RIte Share, a premium assistance program for families eligible for the state’s Medicaid program but who also have access to approved employer-sponsor health plans. Instead of enrolling these families in Medicaid, the state instead pays the employee portion of the premium. The state estimates that for every 1,000 full-year RIte Share enrollees, it saves $1 million.11 Scaled-Back Benefits Policies Many states have also sought to increase the number of affordable health insurance options available by allowing for the sale of scaled-back or “barebones” policies that do not have to include statemandated benefits. Since 1999, 11 states have either considered or passed such laws but the success of such legislation is unclear. For example, one of the bare-bones policies for sale under Arkansas’ Health Insurance Consumer Choice Act of 2001 is only 4 to 9 percent cheaper than policies that include all mandated benefits. This difference is not likely to be enough to entice employers who are currently offering care to switch, or to encourage employers not offering coverage to begin doing so.12 Employer Mandates There are two types of employer mandates. The first requires all employers to provide health insurance for their employees. The second gives employers a choice: they either offer insurance benefits or are subject to an employer tax that will fund a public health plan. This second version is sometimes referred to as “play or pay.” Proponents of mandates argue that when the mandate applies to all employers, no employer can gain a competitive advantage by not offering benefits. 552

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Hawaii is the only state to have approved and implemented employer mandates. Since 1974, Hawaii has required employers to provide health insurance to employees who work more than 20 hours a week. Washington enacted a similar law in 1993 but repealed it in 1995. Massachusetts and Oregon both passed play-or-pay laws in the late 1980s but neither state enacted the legislation. In 1996, Massachusetts repealed the law. That same year, Oregon allowed the law to expire. More recently, California passed the Health Insurance Act of 2003 (SB2) which established a pay-orplay employer mandate. Once implemented, this program would have expanded health insurance to about 1 million of California’s uninsured. A referendum challenging the law was placed on the November 2004 ballot. By a slim margin of less than two percent, voters chose to repeal the law before it could be implemented.13 High-Risk Insurance Pools Thirty-three states now have high-risk insurance pools.14 While state programs vary, in general, to qualify for a program, an individual must have been rejected by an insurance company because of the high risk he or she poses. An individual may also qualify because of a specific health condition. Premiums for high-risk plans are higher than market average and states sometimes cap enrollment and/or lifetime benefits. Some states are looking more favorably on these plans because the 2002 Trade Adjustment Act made money available to states for establishing high-risk insurance pools and to cover some of the losses associated with these plans. While the plans cover only a small group of individuals—less than 200,000 people—they are a critical source of coverage for this population, especially as health benefits for retirees vanishes and the need for insurance products that bridge the gap between employer coverage and Medicare increases.15 Certificate of Need An increase in the number of specialty or “boutique” hospitals has reignited the debate over state’s use of certificates of need (CON) to limit the number of hospitals or, in some cases, specialists in one area based on need. In Florida, one piece of legislation passed dealing with health insurance affordability included a ban on boutique hospitals. According to Alan Levine, secretary of Florida’s Agency for Health Care Administration, this move was necessary to ensure competition occurs on a level playing field and that better paying patients aren’t siphoned off leaving the safety net hospitals to care only for the poor.

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HEALTH CARE Maine’s Dirigo Health Reform Act also takes on CON. The act establishes the Commission to Study Maine’s Hospitals, a nine-member board that will examine Maine’s hospitals and make recommendations to the Legislature on how best to move forward. The commission will look at a wide variety of issues, including financing, reimbursements, assets, technology, and staffing.16 Association Health Plans At the federal level, association health plans (AHP) are sometimes touted as a solution to the problem. Proponents argue that, “by uniting many small groups with similar interests across the country, AHPs could take full advantage of economies of scale to lower health care costs for their memberships.”17 Risk segmentation and adverse selection are cited as major concerns if these types of plans are allowed, however. Healthier people might be attracted to such plans, exiting the small-group market and leaving those who remain with higher health care costs since the totals are spread over a smaller group. There is also the possibility that only people who feel they are likely to use such a benefit (i.e. those who are already sick) will purchase a policy, driving up costs.

Federal Response The confirmation of Michael Leavitt to replace Tommy Thompson as head the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services has lead to speculation that significant changes in Medicaid and Medicare are on the way. When he was governor of Utah, Leavitt asked for and was given permission to pare back benefits in an effort to expand coverage to a larger group. Preparations are already underway to fight any attempts to cap state Medicaid payments for fear that this will leave states holding the bag if something were to happen to rapidly increase Medicaid enrollment. No matter what happens with Medicaid and Medicare, however, it is likely the Bush administration will continue to promote at least one mechanism it says will help control rising health care costs: health savings accounts. Health Savings Accounts The 2003 Medicare Modernization Act included language creating health savings accounts, or HSAs. Just as an IRA allows an individual to shelter retirement savings, an HSA offers a tax-free way to save money for qualified health-related expenses. Any individual who is covered by a high-deductible health plan (defined as a minimum deductible of $1,000 for

an individual or $2,000 for a family) may establish an HSA. The money contributed is portable and can roll over from year to year. Contributions can be made in one of three ways. An employer can make contributions on which neither the employer nor the employee pays taxes. An individual or family member can make tax-deductible contributions even if the individual doesn’t itemize deductions. Finally, an individual participating in a cafeteria plan, a plan that allows employees to choose benefits from a range of options, can contribute untaxed salary through a salary reduction plan. Proponents of HSAs argue that these accounts give consumers a better understanding of how much health care costs and thus will lead to lower health care spending. Critics, however, worry that HSAs could have unintended consequences. If the accounts are primarily marketed to and purchased by healthy people, HSAs could damage the structure of shared risk upon which the health insurance industry is built.18 To date, less than 400,000 policies have been sold and a recent survey found that “less than a third of workers with insurance have heard of health savings accounts.”19 A second survey of employers found that few will be offering the policies this year although many more are considering adding it as an option in the future.20

Quality Matters In addition to the strategies listed above, some states are looking at quality of care initiatives to improve access to affordable health care coverage. Preventing medical errors eliminates the unnecessary spending associated with such errors, including costly malpractice suits that sometimes follow. Health Information Technology Health information technology (HIT) has the potential to reduce medical error, improve quality of care, help doctors track important information about patients and give consumers more information about their providers, finances, and overall health status. And yet, a recent survey of physicians found that very few have embraced new technologies: ■

Electronic billing is used by only 79 percent of physicians.

Only 27 percent of physicians use electronic medical records and electronic ordering of tests, procedures or prescriptions.

Only 6 percent of physicians routinely use electronic clinical decision support systems. The Council of State Governments

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HEALTH CARE ■

Email is used by only 3 percent of doctors as a method of communicating with patients; 7 percent use it to communicate with other doctors.21

To help speed up implementation, several states are taking action. Delaware has formed a Health Information Network, a statewide, health information and electronic data interchange program that is managed under the Delaware Health Care Commission. Created in 1997, this initiative improves access to care by providing easy access to timely, reliable and relevant health care information. Through a partnership with SureScripts, the Rhode Island Quality Institute has founded an e-prescribing initiative to modernize the prescribing process and improve accuracy for physicians, pharmacists and patients. Rhode Island is serving as a test site for implementing a state-wide electronic system between all retail pharmacies and all prescribers within a state.22 Florida’s Medicaid program recently distributed personal digital assistants to its top 1,000 prescribing physicians. This allows doctors to know if the patient is being treated by other providers, if test have been ordered, and what prescriptions have been ordered and filled.

Conclusion The steps states are taking to improve health insurance affordability are many and varied. Some seem to be having an immediate effect by increasing access to affordable insurance but other strategies are still hotly debated, including association health plans. What is not debatable is states’ role as part of the solution. As insurance regulators and quality monitors, states should continue to seek answers to the question of health insurance affordability. Notes 1 Smith, Cynthia, et. al., “Health Spending Growth Slows in 2003,” Health Affairs, January/February 2005, Vol. 24, No. l, 185-94. 2 Ibid. 3 “2004 Employer Health Benefit Survey,” Kaiser Family Foundation. www.kff.org/insurance/7148/index.cfm. 4 Ibid. 5 “The Affordability Crisis in U.S. Health Care: Findings from the Commonwealth Fund Biennial Health Insurance Survey,” The Commonwealth Fund, March 2004. www.cmwf.org/ programs/insurance/collins_affordability_723.asp. 6 Health Care Coverage in America: Understanding the Issues & Proposed Solutions,” Cover the Uninsured, May 2004. http://covertheuninsuredweek.org/materials/files/ IssuesGuide.pdf. 7 “Reinsurance Programs to Expand Small-Group Coverage,” Presentation by Deborah Chollet of Mathematica,

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June 2004. www.statecoverage.net/0604/chollet.pdf. 8 Ibid. 9 “New Mexico State Coverage Initiative.” Presentation by Carolyn Ingram of New Mexico Human Services Department, June 2004. www.statecoverage.net/0604/ ingram.ppt. 10 “Limited-Benefit Policies: Public and Private-Sector Experiences.” State Coverage Initiatives, July 2004. www.statecoverage.net/pdf/issuebrief704.pdf. 11 “RIte Share Premium Assistance Program: Then and Now.” Presentation by Kate Brewster of RI Department of Human Services, June 2004. www.statecoverage.net/0604/ brewster.ppt. 12 “Limited-Benefit Policies: Public and Private-Sector Experiences.” State Coverage Initiatives, July 2004. www.statecoverage.net/pdf/issuebrief704.pdf. 13 “State Employer Health Insurance Mandates: A Brief History.” California Health Care Foundation, March 2004. www.chcf.org/documents/insurance/sb2/employman/ EmployerInsuranceMandates.pdf and “Proposition 72: Health Care Coverage.” Institute of Governmental Studies, University of California. http://igs.berkeley.edu/library/ htHealthCare.hmtl. 14 “State/Feds Try Out New Roles for High Risk Pools,” State Health Notes, National Conference of State Legislatures, March 22, 2004. 15 Ibid. 16 “Dirigo Health Reform Act: Addressing Health Care Costs, Quality, and Access in Maine,” National Association for State Health Policy, June 2004. http:// statecoverage.net/statereports/me18.pdf. 17 “Insuring the Uninsured Through Association Health Plans,” National Center for Policy Analysis, April 2003. www.ncpa.org/pub/st/st259/. 18 “President Bush Purchases Health Savings Account.” Kaiser Daily Health Policy Report, December 17, 2004. www.kaisernetwork.org/daily_reports/rep_hpolicy_recent_ rep.cfm?dr_DateTime=12-17-04&show=yes. 19 Freudenheim, Milt. “Health Savings Accounts Off to Slow Start.” The New York Times, January 11, 2005. 20 “HSAs: A Market Under Construction, Maybe in Medicare Too.” The Commonwealth Fund’s Washington Health Policy Week In Review, December 20, 2004. 21 Anne-Marie Audet, et. al. “Information Technologies: When Will They Make It into Physicians’ Black Bags?” The Commonwealth Fund, December 2004. www.cmwf.org/publications/publications_show. htm?doc_ id=251984. 22 Sarah Donta. “Upgrading Healthcare: State Plans for Health Information Technology.” Health Policy Monitor, The Council of State Governments, Fall 2004.

About the Author Jenny Sewell is a senior health policy analyst at The Council of State Governments. Her duties include writing, researching and planning conferences on a wide variety of health policy issues, including health literacy, health care quality, medical malpractice and health insurance affordability. She holds a Masters of Public Administration from the University of Kentucky.

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HEALTH

Table 9.1 HEALTH INSURANCE COVERAGE STATUS BY STATE FOR ALL PEOPLE: 2003 (In thousands) Covered and not covered by health insurance during the year

State or other jurisdiction

Total

Covered

United States ......................

288,280

243,320

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

4,427 645 5,576 2,671 35,394

3,798 523 4,626 2,206 28,895

85.8 81.1 83.0 82.6 81.6

629 122 951 465 6,499

14.2 18.9 17.0 17.4 18.4

Colorado ............................. Connecticut ......................... Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................

4,480 3,421 820 16,921 8,571

3,708 3,065 729 13,849 7,162

82.8 89.6 88.9 81.8 83.6

772 357 91 3,071 1,409

17.2 10.4 11.1 18.2 16.4

Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

1,253 1,360 12,628 6,149 2,921

1,126 1,107 10,810 5,296 2,593

89.9 81.4 85.6 86.1 88.7

127 253 1,818 853 329

10.1 18.6 14.4 13.9 11.3

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

2,683 4,110 4,429 1,283 5,493

2,389 3,537 3,517 1,150 4,731

89.0 86.0 79.4 89.6 86.1

294 574 912 133 762

11.0 14.0 20.6 10.4 13.9

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

6,397 9,918 5,076 2,854 5,623

5,685 8,838 4,633 2,343 5,004

89.3 89.1 91.3 82.1 89.0

682 1,080 444 511 620

10.7 10.9 8.7 17.9 11.0

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire .................. New Jersey ..........................

917 1,727 2,250 1,264 8,579

739 1,532 1,824 1,133 7,378

80.6 88.7 81.1 89.7 86.0

177 195 426 131 1,201

19.4 11.3 18.9 10.3 14.0

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

1,871 18,970 8,253 631 11,247

1,457 16,104 6,829 563 9,885

77.9 84.9 82.7 89.1 87.9

414 2,866 1,424 69 1,362

22.1 15.1 17.3 10.9 12.1

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

3,438 3,569 12,155 1,053 4,064

2,737 2,957 10,771 946 3,481

79.6 82.8 88.6 89.8 85.6

701 613 1,384 108 584

20.4 17.2 11.4 10.2 14.4

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................ Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

751 5,909 21,858 2,352 611

659 5,131 16,484 2,055 553

87.8 86.8 75.4 87.3 90.5

91 778 5,374 298 58

12.2 13.2 24.6 12.7 9.5

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

7,386 6,091 1,787 5,429 488

6,424 5,147 1,491 4,836 411

87.0 84.5 83.4 89.1 84.1

962 944 296 593 78

13.0 15.5 16.6 10.9 15.9

District. of Columbia .........

554

475

85.7

79

14.3

Percent 84.4%

Not covered

Percent

44,961

15.6%

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, Current Population Survey, 2004 Annual Social and Economic Supplement. Revised June 25, 2004.

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ENERGY

The 2025 Outlook for Oil and Gas By James M. Kendell Over the next 20 years U.S. consumption of oil and gas is expected to increase by at least onethird, while prices decline somewhat in real terms from today’s high levels. Dependence on foreign imports of oil and gas is expected to increase as domestic production declines. These projections are from the Energy Information Administration’s Annual Energy Outlook 2005 (AEO2005), which provides projections of domestic energy consumption, supply, prices and carbon emissions. The Energy Information Administration (EIA) is an independent analytical and statistical agency within the U.S. Department of Energy. It does not represent any particular point of view on energy policy, and its views are not necessarily those of the Department or the Administration. Assumptions are critical to any forecast. The projections are not statements of what will happen but of what might happen, given certain assumptions. The reference case projections are business-as-usual forecasts, given known technology and technological trends, demographic trends, and current laws and regulations. EIA does not propose, advocate, or speculate on changes in laws and regulations. So, one of the forecast’s key assumptions is that all current laws and regulations remain as enacted. For AEO2005, that means, for example, that the provisions of proposed comprehensive energy legislation are not included in the forecast.

Petroleum Outlook Since the beginning of 2004, high world oil prices have raised gasoline prices and unsettled consumers, but have not significantly reduced their driving. Despite higher prices, domestic crude oil production is expected to continue its historic decline, while consumption increases by 7.9 million barrels per day from 2003 to 2025. As a result, net imports are expected to grow by 7.9 million barrels per day between 2003 and 2025. If world oil prices are higher than projected, the gap between supply and demand is expected to narrow, with higher oil prices spurring production and depressing demand. Prices World oil prices are one of the key assumptions in the Annual Energy Outlook. In addition to the reference case world oil price path, EIA normally pub556

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lishes a high and a low world oil price path. Because of recent crude oil price volatility, a futures case and a very high case were added to AEO2005 (Figure A). World prices are defined as the “average refiners acquisition cost” of imported oil into the United States. This price is about $5-6 per barrel less than the often-quoted West Texas Intermediate price. In the Reference case, prices in 2010 are projected to be about $10 per barrel lower than current prices in 2003 dollars. Between 2003 and 2010, crude oil prices are expected to decline as production from Russia and the Caspian area expands, new fields come on in West Africa, new oil sands production is initiated in Canada, new deepwater oil fields are brought into production in the Gulf of Mexico, and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) expands production capacity. After 2010, oil prices are projected to rise to more than $30 per barrel in 2025. In the October futures case, prices in the near term rise through 2005, and then resume a growth trend similar to the reference case. This case is based on an extrapolation of oil prices loosely corresponding to the October 2004 NYMEX futures strip. In the October futures case, world crude oil prices are assumed to average $44 per barrel in 2005 before falling to about $31 per barrel in 2010 and then generally paralleling the rise in the reference case. In the High A case, prices are projected to remain at about $34 per barrel through 2015 and then increase to more than $39 per barrel in 2025. In the High B case, projected prices continue to increase through 2005 to $44 dollars per barrel, fall to $37 in 2010, and rise to $48 dollars per barrel by 2025. In the Low case, prices are projected to decline from their high in 2004 to $21 per barrel in 2009 and to remain at that level out to 2025. Refined product prices are determined by crude oil costs, refining costs (including profits), marketing costs, and taxes. Whereas crude oil costs tend to increase refined product prices in the forecast, the assumption that Federal motor fuel taxes remain at nominal 2003 levels tends to reduce prices. Thus, gasoline price projections are relatively flat through-

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Figure A: World Oil Prices in Five Cases,1990-2025 (2003 dollars per barrel) 60 50

High B price

40 30

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10 0 1990

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out the projection period with gasoline at $1.59 per gallon in 2025 in the reference case. Oil Consumption In the reference case U.S. petroleum consumption is projected to increase by 7.9 million barrels per day from 2003 to 2025 (Figure B). However, a steep and prolonged rise in crude oil prices, as in the High B case, could reduce the growth in consumption to 6.2 million barrels per day, mainly because of lower growth in gasoline consumption. About 92 percent of the projected reference case growth in petroleum consumption consists of “light products� (including gasoline, diesel, heating oil, jet fuel, kerosene, LPG and petrochemical feedstocks), which are more difficult and costly to produce than heavy products. Gasoline continues to make up nearly one-half of all petroleum used in the United States, increasing from 8.9 million barrels per day in 2003 to 12.9 million in 2025, mostly for transportation. Consumption of distillate fuel is also projected to increase, by 1.9 million barrels per day, from 2003 to 2025. Gasoline is used only in spark-ignition engines; distillate is used in furnaces, boilers, diesel engines and some turbines. Jet fuel consumption is projected to increase by 789,000 barrels per day from 2003 to 2025. Residual fuel use, constrained by air quality regulations, increases by only 110,000 barrels per day

from 2003 to 2025, including an increase of 79,000 barrels per day in residual fuel use for baseload electricity generation. More intensive refinery processing to maximize light product yield and minimize heavy product yield is expected to limit the availability of residual fuel. The transportation sector accounted for twothirds of U.S. petroleum use in 2003. In the forecast, population growth and economic growth cause miles traveled to increase across all modes of transit. Although improvements in vehicle technology yield reductions in fuel use per mile traveled, the increases in mileage outweigh increases in efficiency, leading to increases in consumption of gasoline, diesel and jet fuel. The industrial sector currently accounts for 24 percent of U.S. petroleum demand. In the reference case, industrial consumption is projected to be 1.2 million barrels per day higher in 2025 than it was in 2003, and industrial consumption of liquefied petroleum gas (LPG), largely as a chemical feedstock, increases by about 490,000 barrels per day. In the residential sector, distillate use is displaced by LPG, natural gas, and electricity for home heating toward the end of the forecast. As a result, residential oil use drops by 88,000 barrels per day from 2003 to 2025. Commercial use of heating oil grows from 246,000 barrels per day in 2003 to 362,000 barrels per day in 2025. The delivered price of disThe Council of State Governments

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Figure B: Petroleum Supply, Consumption, and Imports, 1990–2025 (million barrels per day) History

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25 20

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tillate to commercial customers is projected to be lower than the price of natural gas throughout the forecast. Only 3 percent of U.S. electricity is currently generated from refined petroleum, but the electricity sector nearly matches residential petroleum use by the end of the forecast. Consumption of residual and distillate fuel in the electric power sector increase modestly. Oil Production In the AEO2005 reference case, U.S. crude oil production is projected to increase from 5.7 million barrels per day in 2003 to 6.2 million barrels per day in 2009 as a result of increased production offshore, predominantly from the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico. Beginning in 2010, U.S. crude oil production begins to decline, falling to 4.7 million barrels per day in 2025. A steep and prolonged rise in crude oil prices, as in the High B case, could increase total domestic supply by 2.2 million barrels a day in 2025, including 1.2 million barrels per day from synthetic petroleum fuel produced from coal and natural gas (Figure B). In the reference case, crude oil production from Alaska is expected to decline to about 810,000 barrels per day in 2010. After 2010, increased produc558

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tion from the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska (NPR-A) raises Alaska’s total production to about 890,000 barrels per day in 2014. Depletion of the oil resource base in the North Slope, NPR-A, and southern Alaska oil fields is expected to lead to a decline in the State’s total production to about 610,000 barrels per day in 2025. Alaska crude oil production originates mainly from the North Slope, which includes the NPR-A and the state lands surrounding Prudhoe Bay. Because drilling is currently prohibited in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge (ANWR), AEO2005 does not project any production from ANWR. Import Dependence In 2003, net imports of petroleum climbed to a record 56 percent of domestic petroleum consumption. Dependence on petroleum imports is projected to reach 68 percent in 2025 in the reference case. (In the High B case, import dependence reaches only 58 percent in 2025.) The expected value of petroleum imports in the reference case in 2025 is projected to be $216 billion in 2003 dollars. Total annual U.S. expenditures for petroleum imports, which reached a historical peak of $148 billion in 1980, were $122 billion in 2003. Net U.S. petroleum imports are projected to in-

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ENERGY crease from 11.2 million barrels per day in 2003 to 19.1 million in 2025. Crude oil accounts for most of the increase in imports, because distillation capacity at U.S. refineries is expected to be more than 5.5 million barrels per day higher in 2025 than it was in 2003. Net imports of refined petroleum, including refined products, unfinished oils, and blending components, are expected to almost double by 2025, to 3.0 million barrels per day. Crude oil imports from the North Sea are projected to decline gradually as North Sea production ebbs. Significant imports of petroleum from Canada and Mexico are expected to continue, with much of the Canadian contribution coming from the development of its enormous oil sands resource base. West Coast refiners are expected to import small volumes of crude oil from the Far East to replace the declining production of Alaska crude oil. The Persian Gulf share of total gross petroleum imports, 20.4 percent in 2003, is expected to increase to almost 30 percent in 2025; and the OPEC share of total gross imports, which was 42 percent in 2003, is expected to be above 60 percent in 2025. Vigorous growth in demand for lighter petroleum products in developing countries means that U.S. refin-

ers are likely to import smaller volumes of light, lowsulfur crude oils. Most of the increase in refined product imports is projected to come from refiners in the Caribbean Basin, North Africa and the Middle East, where refining capacity is expected to expand significantly.

Natural Gas Outlook Unlike oil, natural gas is still largely supplied from domestic sources. But over the forecast, imports are expected to more than double. Domestic natural gas production is expected to increase more slowly than consumption over the forecast, rising from 19.0 trillion cubic feet (Tcf) in 2003 to 21.8 Tcf in 2025. Growing production is supported by rising wellhead gas prices, relatively abundant gas resources, and improvements in technologies, particularly for unconventional gas. Economic conditions allow an Alaskan pipeline to begin moving gas to the lower 48 states in 2016. Consumption is forecast to climb from 22.4 Tcf in 2003 to 30.7 Tcf by 2025. The increase is primarily due to the rapid growth in demand for electricity generation and industrial applications, which account for almost 75 percent of the growth. The difference be-

Figure C: Net U.S. Imports of Natural Gas, 1970–2025 (trillion cubic feet) History

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Projections Liquefied Natural Gas

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Mexico

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ENERGY tween consumption and production is made up by increasing use of imports. In AEO2005, net imports grow from 3.3 Tcf in 2003 to 8.7 Tcf in 2025. The national average wellhead price is projected to reach $4.16 per thousand cubic feet (mcf) in 2003 dollars in 2015 and $4.79 per mcf in 2025. Consumption The strongest growth in natural gas consumption is in the electric power sector, where consumption is projected to almost double, from 5.1 trillion cubic feet in 2003 to 9.4 trillion cubic feet in 2025. Demand by electricity generators is expected to account for 31 percent of total natural gas consumption in 2025, compared with about 23 percent in 2003. Electric power gas consumption growth results from both the construction of new gas-fired generation plants and from a higher capacity utilization of gas-fired generation plants. Most new electricity generation capacity is expected to be fueled by natural gas, because natural-gas-fired generators are projected to have advantages over coal-fired generators, including lower capital costs, higher fuel efficiency, shorter construction lead times, and lower emissions. Toward the end of the

forecast, however, when natural gas prices rise substantially, coal-fired power plants are expected to be competitive for new capacity additions, and gas begins to lose market share to coal. Industrial consumption (including lease and plant fuel) remains the largest consuming sector and is projected to increase from 8.3 trillion cubic feet in 2003 to 10.3 trillion cubic feet in 2025. Those industrial sectors projected to experience the greatest gas consumption growth from 2003 through 2025 include metal-based durables, petroleum refining, bulk chemicals, and food. In the residential and commercial sectors, natural gas consumption is projected to increase by about 0.7 percent and 1.2 percent per year, respectively, from 2003 to 2025. Production Domestic gas production is expected to increase from 19.0 Tcf in 2003 to 21.8 Tcf in 2025. Increased U.S. natural gas production comes primarily from unconventional sources and from Alaska. Unconventional gas production increases by 2.0 Tcf over the forecast period, mainly because of technological improvements, rising prices, and relatively

Figure D: Lower 48 Natural Gas Wellhead Prices,1970–2025 (2003 dollars per thousand cubic feet) $8.23

nominal dollars

$1.55

1995

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Slow technology

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$5.18 $4.79

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ENERGY abundant unconventional sources (tight sands, shale and coalbed methane). Annual production from unconventional sources is expected to account for 44 percent of lower-48 production in 2025, compared to 35 percent in 2003. Over the forecast, Alaska gas production accounts for most of the growth in domestic conventional gas production, growing by 1.8 Tcf over the forecast period. Alaska gas is projected to begin flowing to the lower-48 states in 2016. With subsequent expansion of this pipeline, Alaskan gas production reaches 2.2 Tcf in 2025, compared with 0.4 Tcf in 2003. Lower-48 onshore and offshore non-associated conventional gas production is expected to decline by about 900 Bcf, as resource depletion causes exploration and development costs to increase. Production of associated-dissolved (AD) natural gas from lower-48 crude oil reserves is projected to grow from 2.5 Tcf in 2003 to 3.1 Tcf in 2010. After 2010, both onshore and offshore AD gas production is expected to decline, with total AD gas production falling to 2.4 Tcf in 2025. Imports Imports are expected to be priced competitively with domestic sources of natural gas, and net imports of natural gas are expected to make up the difference between U.S. production and consumption. Liquefied natural gas (LNG) is expected to account for most of the projected increase in net imports (Figure C). One new LNG terminal started operation this year offshore Louisiana. By the end of the forecast, sufficient new LNG terminal capacity comes into operation to allow net LNG imports to increase from 440 bcf in 2003 to 6.4 trillion cubic feet in 2025. By 2025, net LNG imports are expected to equal 21 percent of total U.S. gas consumption, compared to 2 percent in 2003. Net LNG imports are expected to rise from 13 percent of net imports in 2003 to 74 percent in 2025. Net imports of natural gas from Canada are projected to be 3.0 trillion cubic feet in 2005, and then decline gradually to 2.5 trillion cubic feet in 2009. A MacKenzie Delta natural gas pipeline is projected to begin transporting gas in 2010, and imports subsequently rise to 3.0 tcf in 2015. After 2015, net gas imports from Canada are projected to again decline, falling to 2.5 trillion cubic feet in 2025. Conventional production in the Western Sedimentary Basin is projected to decline throughout the projection, but unconventional gas production in Western Canada, conventional production in the MacKenzie Delta and Eastern Canada, and LNG imports are expected to more than offset the production decline in the Western Sedimen-

tary Basin. Towards the end of the forecast, imports from Canada decline as Canadian gas consumption increases faster than Canadian gas production. Although Mexico has considerable natural gas resources, the United States historically has been a net exporter of gas to Mexico. Net exports of U.S. natural gas to Mexico are projected to grow until 2006, and subsequently decline after 2006 as LNG terminals in Baja California come online to serve both the Mexican and U.S. markets. Prices Average wellhead prices for natural gas are projected to increase from $4.88 per thousand cubic feet (2003 dollars) in 2003 to $5.30 per thousand cubic feet in 2005 (Figure D). After 2005, natural gas wellhead prices are projected to decline to $3.64 per thousand cubic feet in 2010 as the initial availability of new import sources and production from increased drilling expands available supply. After 2010, wellhead prices are projected to increase gradually, reaching $4.79 in 2025. The increase is in response to higher exploration and development costs associated with smaller and deeper gas deposits in the remaining domestic gas resource base. Growth in unconventional sources, Alaska production, and LNG imports are not expected to increase enough to offset the impacts of resource depletion and increased demand. Prices are projected to increase in an uneven fashion as new, large-volume supply projects temporarily depress prices when initially brought online. In nominal dollars, the 2025 price is the equivalent of $8.23 per thousand cubic feet. The reference case forecast assumes known technology and technological trends. Wellhead natural gas price projections are more sensitive to variations in technological change than to the levels of natural gas production and consumption. And, prices vary significantly under alternate technology assumptions. Under the reference case, technologies are assumed to increase at historical rates. In the rapid and slow technology cases, the technology parameters in the model are increased and decreased by 50 percent. The slow technology case projects a wellhead price of $5.18 per thousand cubic feet in constant 2003 dollars in 2025, which is 8 percent higher than the reference case price. In the rapid technology case, lower 48 natural gas wellhead prices are projected to reach $4.35 per thousand cubic feet in 2025, which is 9 percent lower than in the reference case. The Council of State Governments

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Summary Oil and gas prices are expected to decline in real terms through 2010, as current high prices spur the development of more foreign and domestic supplies and technological development continues. After 2010, prices are expected to rise steadily—though not as high as 2004 prices, as demand increases and resources continue to deplete. Domestic consumption of oil and gas is expected to increase by at least one-third through 2025. In the face of declining oil and gas production by 2020, dependence on imports of oil and gas is expected to increase significantly. LNG is projected to meet most of the U.S. needs for additional natural gas imports.

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About the Author James M. Kendell is director of the Oil and Gas Division of the Office of Integrated Analysis and Forecasting at the U.S. Energy Information Administration (EIA). For the past 13 years he has managed natural gas and oil forecasting and analysis, and the development of the oil and gas models in the National Energy Modeling System (NEMS). Kendell graduated with an M.A. in Public Policy and Administration and a certificate in Energy Analysis and Policy from the University of Wisconsin-Madison in 1983. He received a B.S.J. with highest distinction from the University of Kansas in 1975.

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ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

State Economic Development Strategies: Job Growth and Retention in a Recovering Economy By Jeffrey Finkle Despite the slow turnaround of the economy, states are still faced with the challenge of maintaining and creating new jobs. Around the country state governments and economic development organizations are relying on proven programs and are challenging themselves to develop new ones in an effort to attract businesses to their areas and encourage expansion among existing local companies. Economically, the year 2004 will go down in history as a mixed-bag, of sorts. The war in Iraq is technically over, but the multibillion-dollar price tag on our continued presence in the country and commitment to rebuilding it continues to soar. The recession that according to the Bureau of Economic Research, began in March 2001 and, technically, came to an end in November 2001 continues to leave its mark on the economy; although unemployment numbers have leveled off and are ever so slowly beginning to decrease. Despite any progress, the competition among states to create new jobs and retain existing ones is just as fierce as it was when the country was in the throes of a recession. States continue to struggle to retain and attract businesses that are, in their efforts to increase productivity, looking for more favorable conditions not only in other states, but in other countries as well. The International Economic Development Council, the largest economic development association in the United States, plays an important role in helping economic development entities to navigate the process of facilitating job growth, business development, and property development in a challenging climate. From Vermont to California and all spots in between, states are all playing the same courting game—wooing new businesses to their area and coaxing existing companies to stay put and expand. The common thread in the states’ approach to achieving the aforementioned goals is twofold, consisting of self-promotion and incentives. States have to sell their attributes, such as a highly-educated workforce or reasonably priced land. Additionally, they also frequently seal or sweeten the deal with new or existing businesses by offering incentives, ranging from tax breaks to job-training assistance. As for areas of focus, all states are pursuing high-technology businesses in an effort to expand and replace outdated sectors, while simultaneously cultivating successful existing industries.

What Kept Companies at Home in 2004: Old Programs with New Results Vermont, which posted the lowest unemployment rate in the country at 3.1 percent in November 2004,1 has employed a bevy of programs to help maintain and create new job opportunities for residents. One such endeavor that has proven successful is the Vermont Department of Economic Development’s Vermont Training Program (VTP), which encourages expansion among industrial companies by providing training through individually tailored programs; the state covers as much as 50 percent of the training costs. The importance of educating and training local potential and existing employees is best expressed by one of the state’s largest employer. “The field on which Vermont can compete successfully with other states is the quality of our workforce,” John O’Kane, manager of governmental affairs for IBM in Vermont, noted in a report of the Vermont Workforce Education & Training Consortium. During FY 2004, VTM trained 1,694 employees at 153 businesses.2 In November, VTP awarded $50,000 in training funds to Dirigo Paper Mill in Gilman, thereby allowing the manufacturer to create 25 new jobs. Recognizing the program’s benefits and encouraging its continued success, the Vermont Legislature signed off on a 30 percent increase to $1.3 million in funding for the program in the 2005 budget. While the state’s key industries include financial services, technology and manufacturing, officials have not overlooked rural locales where the often struggling agricultural sector continues to generate $3 billion in revenue annually, with approximately 74 percent of that money being churned out by the state’s 1,400 dairy farms.3 And those dairy farms— with their laborers, milk transporters, processors, farm service firms and the like—provide thousands of jobs. In an effort to bolster the industry, the state Legislature in April 2003 approved the Vermont Economic Development Authority’s Farm Operating The Council of State Governments

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ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT Loan Program, a fund of up to $20 million operated through the Vermont Agricultural Credit Corporation; it provides loans of up to $100,000 at below-market interest rates for dairy farms and $50,000 for nondairy farms to cover a variety of annual operating expenses. Training programs and targeted loans are just two commonly employed incentives used to keep businesses up and running or to help them expand. Another means to this end is the packaging of such incentives. In Pennsylvania, the Governor’s Action Team (GAT) does just that. Comprised of high-level economic development leaders, GAT reports directly to Pennsylvania Gov. Edward G. Rendell and handholds companies in their growth pursuits by coordinating resources from various agencies and groups. “Their job is basically to work with companies that are already here in the state on projects that will create additional jobs by offering financial incentive bundles,” says Kevin Ortiz, communications director for the Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development. “The bundles can include tax credits, loan programs, the creation of opportunity grants, job creation tax credits.” The results of the team’s work speaks for itself. In 2004, the group assisted in creating and retaining thousands of jobs at 75 businesses. Among them, Aramark Corporation in Philadelphia where GAT played a prominent role in the managed services provider’s decision to resist wooing by Delaware and New Jersey and stay at its 300,000 square foot headquarters in the 630,000 square foot aptly named Aramark Tower, thereby retaining over 1,400 jobs. GAT convinced the company to stay put with an $8.75 million incentives package that included such benefits as lowinterest loans and tax credits. Not only did the company decide to remain at its locale under a new 15-year lease agreement, it made plans to expand by an additional 50,000 square feet and to create 250 new positions. In another coup, GAT had a helping hand in 2,100 jobs at Bayer Corp., 3,700 at Sunoco Inc. and 1,500 and Towers Perrin.

Reeling Them In: Time-tested Programs and New Ideas Take States into the Future With a successful program in place to assist in business growth and retention, Pennsylvania focused its attention in 2004 on stimulating economic development and improving communities through the newly established Governor’s Economic Stimulus Plan. The $2 billion endeavor—expected to induce a target goal of $5 billion in private investment—consists of 19 programs designed to fuel business through 564

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a range of economic endeavors, including offering support for the establishment of new companies. To that end, the stimulus package includes the $60 million New Pennsylvania Venture Capital Investment Program, which provides funds for businesses willing to invest, through matching funds, in partnerships with start-up companies. Business in Our Sites is another one of programs under the governor’s plan. This $300 million program provides communities with the monetary support needed to create viable, infrastructure-ready sites—particularly at under-utilized locations such as brownfields—to serve as homes for new companies. This particular endeavor allows communities to focus on luring new businesses to their areas in the immediate future, as well as in the long-term. Other forms of partnership programs have already proven successful in other states. Ohio’s Third Frontier Project, established in 2002 by Gov. Bob Taft and operated by the Ohio Department of Development, targets the universally burgeoning technology sector. The objective of the $1.1 billion, 10-year investment program is to utilize partnerships to further develop research capabilities, encourage new product development, and foster new manufacturingcentric technologies that will, in turn, fortify existing businesses. “We are creating a climate that entices companies to be interested in Ohio,” Third Frontier Commission Staff Director Norman Chagnon explains. Case in point, Wright State University in Dayton and the Center of Innovation in Advanced Data Management and Analysis, an entity centered on the research and development of information technology services. Through the Third Frontier Project, Ohio contributed $11.1 million to the university in 2003 for the establishment of the center, which will create 500 new high-level positions over the next three years. The financial investment is having, as planned, a domino effect. “As a result of that investment a West Coast company, Alien Technology, is setting up a major presence in Dayton, Ohio,” notes Chagnon. News of the plan was confirmed in the fall of 2004. “One of their big reasons for moving to Dayton was our investment in the Center.” With the opening of the new Dayton location of the California-headquartered company will come with about 100 new high-level jobs. Texas, riding high from its successful $300 million Texas Enterprise Fund (TEF) program, announced in December 2004 that it would turn a more focused eye toward courting the various businesses within the technology sector through the establishment of the Texas Emerging Technology Fund

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ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT (TETF);4 suggested targeted industries range from nanotechnology to environmental sciences. Proposed by Gov. Rick Perry, the $300 million program would take a three-pronged approach to drawing new companies to the state; an endeavor that would also help build and maintain Texas’s position as a competitive entity in the global economy. Half of TETF’s funds would be spent on cultivating collaborations between universities and private businesses as a means of developing “Regional Centers of Innovation and Commercialization,” such as Houston’s Center for Advanced Diagnostic Imaging. Additionally, $75 million would go toward matching federal or private sector research grants that involve collaborations with local universities pursuing groundbreaking scientific achievements. Finally, the remaining $75 million would be used to entice celebrated research teams from other universities around the country to come to Texas and impart their wisdom to local public universities. If the progress achieved through TEF is any indication of Texas’s power to generate jobs through new business, then TETF will be an unqualified success. TEF has brought thousands of new positions to the state by luring companies and/or encouraging their local expansion. Perhaps the grandest achievement under the program is Calabasas, Calif.-based Countrywide Financial’s decision, announced in mid-December, to expand its presence in Richardson, Texas through the addition of 7,500 new jobs over the next six years. The state secured Countrywide’s commitment to grow at its Richardson site by offering an incentive package that included $20 million in TEF funding. Focusing on a burgeoning industry has been one fruitful means of attracting new companies, promoting a state’s unique assets is another. Acting through the Oregon Economic and Community Development Department (OECDD) in 2003, Oregon launched its Brand Oregon campaign, a statewide effort to stimulate the economy through the promotion of Oregon’s local characteristics and products. The program began with the touting of a product for which the state has become known: seafood. Most recently, the state has seen great success by promoting a distinctive package of Oregon products that involved increasingly popular wines form local vineyards and Oregon specialty cheeses. As of late, however, the state’s dedication to protecting the environment has become an equally viable indigenous asset to promote to new businesses. “We find that the organic—well, they call themselves specialty food processors—are very compatible with Oregon because we have such a high

value that we place on our environmental practices and that meshes very compliantly with organic food processors who share those values,” says Michelle Godfrey, OECDD communications manager for the Oregon Economic and Community Development Department.” A recent coup in this area involves Amy’s Kitchen, a Santa Rosa, California-based family-operated natural and organic foods producer that settled on White City, a town in Southern Oregon, for the home of its new 400,000 square foot manufacturing plant after considering several other states; California made the biggest and seemingly strongest pitch for the facility. While the environment played a role in the company’s decision, it was Oregon’s traditional promotion of its comparably lower tax rates and workers’ compensation rates, as well as its cost effective land prices and reasonable utility rates that sealed the deal.5 Still, the fact that Amy’s Kitchen took an interest in the state’s environmentallyfriendly climate has sparked new ideas. “We may be going after that segment in the next year ahead,” Godfrey says. Oregon’s win as the site of California-based Amy’s Kitchen’s new manufacturing plant had more to do with Oregon than California, but Idaho relies on the direct comparison to California as one of its main tools for coaxing companies to relocate to the Potato State. “We’re a low-cost area,” explains Randy Shroll, sales and marketing manager for the Idaho Department of Commerce. “We don’t have a large budget for programs so we target northern and southern California because it’s such a high cost and regulated area to do business.” In October of 2003, the Department of Commerce launched an advertising campaign, relying on funds from the department’s meager $120,000 budget. The ads ran for four months in California business publications and the West Coast edition of the Wall Street Journal and touted the sizable potential savings in business operating expenses. Even before the ad campaign, however, Idaho had managed to lure away a bevy of big names, including El Cajon, California’s Buck Knives, a sport-utility knife manufacturer that began building a new 128,000 square foot plant in Post Falls, Idaho in the spring of 2004. States like Idaho and Nevada have spent the last few years directing their efforts to bring in new businesses at California-based companies that have grown weary of the state’s comparatively high cost of living and other business challenges. Last year, however, California responded by putting some of its powerful Hollywood muscle to work. Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger—the celebrity action film The Council of State Governments

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ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT star sworn into office in late 2003 following a special election6—initiated a billboard advertising campaign through the California Commission for Jobs and Economic Growth7 featuring his world renowned visage and the catch phrase, “Arnold Says: California Wants Your Business.” Placed on billboards in major metropolitan cities of competing states in the country, as well as such bustling East Coast locales as Times Square in New York City, the campaign was designed to stave off efforts by states to lure away California companies by touting the positive aspects of conducting business in the state. The “Arnold Says...” effort was even readapted for the governor’s trade mission to Japan in an effort to promote the California business climate on an international level.8 The struggle to create new jobs persisted in 2004 as states—through new programs and existing ones— continued to tout their local amenities, woo the hightech industry and peddle incentive packages. The economy may be on in the midst of a turnaround, but the persisting frenzy among the states to compete for jobs through the courting of new businesses and the encouragement of expansion among existing companies show no signs of being effected by any such change.

Notes 1 Regional and State Employment and Unemployment Summary, Regional and State Employment and Unemployment: November 2004. (U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics, 2004). http://www.bls.gov/news.release/ laus.nr0.htm. 2 Vermont Department of Economic Development,

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Workforce Training: Vermont Training Program, http:// www.thinkvermont.com/workforce/vt_train.cfm. 3 House Concurrent Resolution (H.C.R. 240) Recognizing the Economic and Cultural Importance and Vitality of Vermont’s Agricultural Community. 2003–2004, http:// www.leg.state.vt.us/docs/legdoc.cfm?RL =/docs/2004/acts/ ACTR424.HTM. 4 Texas Emerging Technology Fund—White Paper, http:/ /www.utsystem.edu/news/2004/Emerging TechFundWhitePaper12-13-04.pdf. 5 Area Development—Site and Facility Planning, November 2004, http://www.area-development.com/2005cd directory/pacific1.html; Oregon Economic & Community Development Department, http://www.econ.state.or. us/ BIcosts.htm. 6 The State of California, http://www.governor.ca. gov/ state/govsite/gov_htmldisplay.jsp?BV_ SessionID= @ @ @ @ 0 5 8 0 4 2 7 0 5 2 . 11 0 3 3 0 1 7 4 2 @ @ @ @ & B V _ EngineID=cccgadddgehdlimcfngcfkmdffidfog.0&sFile Path=%2fgovsite%2fbiography%2fbio_arnold_schwarzenegger.html& sTitle=Arnold+Schwarzenegger+Biography&sCatTitle=Biographies. 7 California Commission for Jobs and Economic Growth, http://4cajobs.com/press/20040803. 8 California Commission for Jobs and Economic Growth, http://4cajobs.com/press/kit/roppongipress kit.pdf.

About the Author Jeffrey Finkle, a 20-year veteran in the world of economic development, is president and CEO of the Washington, D.C.-based Intentional Economic Development Council. Finkle, who earned a Bachelor of Science degree in communications form Ohio University and studied business administration at the graduate level at Ohio State University, also has a history in the public sector, having served as deputy assistant secretary of Community Planning and Development for program management with the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development.

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ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

Federal Incentives Ruling and the Corporate Attraction Process By Adam Bruns Economic developers and elected officials have long faced accusations of “corporate welfare” for the methods they use to lure companies to their turf. But a federal appeals court ruling in September 2004 that called certain Ohio tax breaks unconstitutional has also suddenly called everyone’s turf into question. While companies and states alike scramble for certainty in making the case for projects, the legal case may eventually wind its way to the Supreme Court. September 2004 saw hurricanes on two coasts and a major earthquake on another, but it was a federal appeals court decision in the U.S. heartland that packed an economic development wallop still awaiting measurement. On Sept. 2, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit—whose jurisdiction encompasses automotive corridor states Michigan, Ohio, Kentucky and Tennessee—ruled after 19 months of deliberation that the State of Ohio’s machinery and equipment investment tax credit program violates the Commerce Clause of the U.S. Constitution. Yet the same ruling determined that the state’s property tax abatement program passed federal and state muster. An immediate move was made to file an en banc petition, placing the case—Charlotte Cuno, et al. v. DaimlerChrysler, Inc., et al—before the entire 13 active judges on the Sixth Circuit’s roster, rather than just the panel of three that issued the ruling. Whether ruling on that petition will be expedited remains to be seen. In the meantime, professionals on all sides of the site selection equation are scrambling to determine what the ruling means in the short and long term for projects either already under way or pending across the country. Many saw some confounding rationale in the 18-page court document. “It’s a very broad and troubling decision, based on peculiar legal reasoning,” said Jay Biggins, managing director, national incentives, for Stadtmauer Bailkin Biggins, based in Princeton, N.J. “It injects uncertainty into a process that craves predictability. It’s turned a lot of planning involving billions of dollars on its head.” Briefs of support for Ohio and DaimlerChrysler have been filed by a wide cross-section of industry players. That includes the United Auto Workers (UAW), whose membership includes 3,628 active members at the Jeep plant in Toledo, Ohio, where incentives related to its 1998 construction precipitated the lawsuit. The original project was a $1.2 bil-

lion blockbuster, and the incentives in question were valued at up to $90 million over seven years, of which the company has claimed a relatively small portion. Meanwhile, DaimlerChrysler, along with three major suppliers, just announced another $900 million investment in the complex in the summer of 2004. “We don’t expect it to derail the project,” said Eileen Granata, interim COO for the Regional Growth Partnership (RGP) in Toledo in fall 2004, noting another ongoing expansion at Libbey Glass. In fact, Toledo industrial activity is churning at its highest level in years. As for other prospects, “it’s early to say it’s driving projects away,” she said, but it “hasn’t been a helpful part of those discussions, particularly against other states not in the sixth district. Look at projects in which we’re competing with Indiana—we have seen that in a couple of those cases, we’re significantly more at risk. From a manufacturing standpoint, one of your biggest tools is suddenly gone.” Indeed, not long after the ruling was issued, Indiana was the grateful recipient of a new automotive plant announcement from Canada’s Magna International, as well as a $12.9 million investment from Illinois-based plumbing technology company Geberit Manufacturing, which also has operations in Ohio, as well as Wisconsin and Alabama. The turmoil is taking place against the backdrop of a regional automotive industry economy that is unparalleled in its impact on the nation’s economy at large: One in 10 jobs in the United States is in some way connected to the automotive industry. And if companies are subjected to increasing uncertainty about the financial conditions under which they operate, they immediately search out more stable ground. That could mean foreign ground, including NAFTA neighbor Canada, where it’s one in seven jobs that are automotive-related. Coincidentally, that country has just stepped up to the incentives bargaining table after years of avoiding it, with both federal and Ontario incentive programs helping to stoke The Council of State Governments

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ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT major project announcements from automotive OEMs in the fall of 2004. In contrast to the court panel’s apparent aim to level the proverbial playing field, UAW attorneys noted that the decision, by not taking into account the historical development of different states’ economies, “creates a situation in which the playing field has not been leveled but rather has been tilted—even if unintentionally—in favor of some states.” The brief goes on to cite a 2003 study by the Center for Automotive Research. Because of differences in how their regional economies have developed, northern states offer incentive packages including 83 percent tax abatements and 13 percent infrastructure improvements, while southern states’ packages included only 38 percent tax abatements, 44 percent infrastructure improvements and 18 percent employee training and recruitment. Other briefs in support come from Nissan North America and Ford Motor Co.

Prelude to Tax Reform? “Stunned” was one adjective used by Bruce Johnson, director of the Ohio Department of Development, in describing his reaction to the ruling. “‘Curious’ would be another one,” he said, “and frankly, reading the decision doesn’t give me any more confidence.” Johnson appeared with other dignitaries in Columbus in September to honor Honda’s 25 years of operations in the state, including five plants and a major R&D center. Part of the festivities was devoted to noting that for every dollar of the $27 million in direct incentives Honda has received in that time, the company has invested $226 in Ohio operations. The state was further relieved later in the fall when Honda, as part of a series of global project announcements, announced a further $100-million investment in its Russells Point, Ohio, operations. But away from the spotlight, “the manufacturing community is extremely concerned about it,” Johnson said of the ruling. “How do we handle our credits already offered? How is the state tax department going to handle various filings?” An example of just such a quandary was offered up by Ohio Gov. Bob Taft’s office on Sept. 7, when it announced various incentives for prospective projects. One was a pending $3.2-million, 25-job expansion by Jim Beam Brands Co. at its Cincinnati location, which currently employs 123 people. Part of the package was $360,000 in the form of a Manufacturing & Equipment (M&E) tax credit, the very program now deemed unconstitutional. 568

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The incentive package for a new Dell fulfillment center in the Cincinnati suburb of West Chester does not include the suddenly illegal credits, but Melissa Koehler, director of West Chester Economic Development, said, “The credit was our top tool for helping existing manufacturers grow. The reason the tax credit was a good business retention stimulus is what I call ‘silent growth’ — existing companies that invest significantly in new machines and technology but are not physically expanding their buildings and don’t make the news. For these companies, who often don’t meet requirements for the big-bang programs like property tax abatements, the M&E credit was a ‘cash back’ deal that directly returned funds to them to reinvest in jobs and better technology.” “The only way to compete on a global basis is to keep costs down for these companies,” said Michael Mullady, a Columbus-based senior associate with the Industrial Properties division of CB Richard Ellis. “Issues with labor rates or tax incentives are typically why we’re losing. ‘Our abatements are burning off, so we’re moving” is a constant threat, but the states do a great job of balancing out each other on incentives.” As several experts point out, the language of the decision casts no aspersions on direct subsidies— “according to this decision, just handing them cash is okay,” said Johnson. This and other aspects of incentives will no doubt be front and center on the agendas of several state legislatures. “In the spring, the legislature will have to confront this,” said Johnson, who is keen on comprehensive tax reform that addresses “lowering rates, broadening the base, reducing the penalty on capital expenditures and regulatory reform too.” Meanwhile, he didn’t want to exaggerate the impact of just one legal ruling on Ohio’s competitiveness: “We think Ohio started out and continues to be competitive,” he said. “The bottom line is how do we encourage people to make investments in our state? Some [incentives] create jobs and some just create productivity. Both are critically important.”

Do Breaks Bring Boom? In research published early in 2004, UCLA economist Enrico Moretti and MIT’s Michael Greenstone used “million-dollar plant” stories and data from the archives of Site Selection to look at the ongoing economic vitality of 82 chosen communities vs. the runner-up cities. The study found that cities chosen for major projects have benefited from their arrangements, with concessions made up for by such factors as increased property val-

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ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT ues (averaging a 1.1 percent increase), higher public spending in areas like education and faster payroll growth in the plant’s industry sector (an average 1.5 percent increase). The economists also noted the “spillover effect” of new plants, as neighboring towns saw job growth. “Overall,” they wrote, “the results undermine the popular view that the provision of local subsidies to attract large industrial plants reduces local residents’ welfare.” Such findings go against the grain of the Ohio case’s plaintiffs, who were backed in large part by Ralph Nader. But the findings may actually fuel the legal argument against the Ohio subsidies rather than quell it, since they support the notion of concrete benefits attached to tax breaks, therefore providing evidence of competitive advantage vs. other states. DaimlerChrysler and others are as worried about the effects of the ruling in other states as much as in Ohio, since about 40 states offer some version of machinery and equipment tax break. In fellow Sixth District state Michigan, for example, a machinery and equipment tax credit is part of the single business tax. Michigan Economic Development Corp. was indeed one of many filing briefs in support of the petition. And that’s fitting, since its chief, Don Jakeway, was not only at the helm of RGP when the original Jeep deal was negotiated, but headed the Ohio Department of Development when the investment tax credit program under scrutiny came into being. “This is the first real win for folks that really don’t want anybody to do anything in this arena,” he said. “I’m not pushing any panic buttons, and I’m not recommending anybody else do that. Yet it’s very important we be proactive and step forward and be supportive, because the issues that are going to be addressed are very important issues, whether this is Ohio or Michigan or Arizona or Louisiana or Mississippi. This could represent a rather dramatic change in how economic development has taken place for at least as long as I’ve been doing it, over 20 years.” Jakeway is concerned about the level of risk now introduced into both past and prospective investment agreements. And he’s concerned about a general setback for economic development professionals, who he says have come a long way in not only professionalizing their methods, but in making incentives performance-based — a detail often lost on incentives critics. “These are the kind of programs that turned around Ohio’s entire economy in the 1990s,” he said. “Tax credits were used for people to spend their money

when we needed them to do it. They worked. Every company that got to take advantage of them would tell you that. And a lot of factors calculated into that ROI.” Indeed, when ROI and tracking of advantage are analyzed from the corporate or community point of view, a wide range of tax-related programs could conceivably find themselves in the crosshairs. “The arguments they used for the interstate commerce clause being violated could have been applied to any tax structure a state has,” said Brian Corde, director, location strategies, for New Jersey-based incentives negotiation and site selection firm Mintax. “In the state of Ohio, they use a multiple factor apportionment scheme. The argument would be ‘If I build this facility in Ohio, by doing that I’d create tax, increase the factor, and increase tax in that state. Why shouldn’t Ohio reduce my tax then?’ They’re just giving back a portion of what they’re taking anyway.” (Ohio’s apportionment scheme is 60 percent sales, 20 percent payroll and 20 percent property.) Consulting firms like these are analyzing the ramifications for similar credits offered in more than 40 states, “and we are exploring alternative transaction structuring strategies which would safeguard projects from this uncertainty,” said Biggins.

The Ultimate Authority Several experts point out that tax systems themselves, with their varying apportionment formulas, create incentives to be in one state or another. In other words, it’s not that big a leap from the particulars of this one case to the general principles that it calls into question. Granata, a licensed attorney in the state of Ohio with a background as an economist and financial officer, observed that apportionment factors have moved all over the board in recent years. A number of states have gone to a 100 percent sales basis for computation of corporate income or franchise taxes. How various factors are worked into taxation formulas “can have some peculiar impacts, particularly when companies are really multi-state,” she said. “Tax systems themselves really create to some extent incentives to be in one state or another, and would treat you disparately based on whether you’re in that state or outside that state.” But don’t make the leap from the specifics of this case too fast, cautioned Corde. “The broad ramifications of this decision probably aren’t as widespread as some people would like to believe,” he said, describing how many companies may not reach the tax level that causes the credits to kick in that quickly. But the fact that the original case The Council of State Governments

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ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT was backed by a Nader-affiliated group means the threat of similar suits in other circuits is very real. And Jay Biggins says the protracted length of time it may take the en banc petition to slog through the legal process only further destabilizes decision-making. Allusions made in the ruling to Supreme Court statements prompt the question on many minds: Will the question of incentives—like the question of eminent domain currently before the justices— eventually get an answer from the country’s highest judiciary authority? Jakeway and others say that’s a possibility. If it does, Jay Biggins volunteered some historical context. “Most litigation surrounding the Commerce Clause occurred within the first 50 years of its adoption,” he says, “when all the states were still trying to get used to the pre-emptive power of the federal

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government. This is an anachronistic interpretation of the Commerce Clause.” The panel of judges, he continued, “purports to premise the decision on an economic reality test, when the economic reality is that any state that chooses to compete for incremental investment can do so. States determine where on the playing field they want to stand. Companies determine what states they want to locate in. It is an open, free, functioning and efficient market, best left alone.”

About the Author Adam Bruns is managing editor of Site Selection, a business publication published by Conway Data Inc. since 1954. Based in the Atlanta suburb of Norcross, the magazine covers the fields of corporate real estate and economic development.

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00Ha-EconomicdevelopmentA

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★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★

Alabama ................................. Alaska ..................................... Arizona ................................... Arkansas ................................ California ...............................

Colorado ................................ Connecticut ............................ Delaware ................................ Florida .................................... Georgia ...................................

Hawaii .................................... Idaho ....................................... Illinois ..................................... Indiana ................................... Iowa ........................................

Kansas .................................... Kentucky ................................ Louisiana ............................... Maine ...................................... Maryland ...............................

Massachusetts ....................... Michigan ................................ Minnesota .............................. Mississippi ............................. Missouri .................................

Montana ................................. Nebraska ................................ Nevada .................................... New Hampshire ..................... New Jersey .............................

New Mexico ........................... New York ................................ North Carolina ...................... North Dakota ........................ Ohio ........................................

See footnotes at end of table.

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

State-sponsored industrial development authority

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ★ ...

★ ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ... ★ ★

State authority or agency general obligation bond financing

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

Privately sponsored development credit corporation

State or other jurisdiction

State authority or agency revenue bond financing

Table A FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE FOR INDUSTRY City and/or county revenue bond financing ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

City and/or County General obligation bond financing ★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

State loans for building construction ★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

State loans for equipment machinery ★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

City and/or county loans for building construction ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

City and/or county loans for equipment, machinery ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

State loan guarantees for building construction ★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

State loan guarantees for equipment, machinery ★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ...

... ★ ★ ★ ★

City and/or county loan guarantees for building construction ... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ★

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ... ... ★ ...

... ★ ... ... ★

City and/or county loan guarantees for equipment, machinery ... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ... ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ★

... ... ... ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ... ... ★

State financing aid for existing plant expansion ★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

State matching funds for city and/or county industrial financing programs ... ... ... ★ ★

... ★ ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ... ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

State incentive for establishing industrial plants in areas of high unemployment ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

City and/or county incentive for establishing industrial plants in areas of high unemployment ★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

571


00Ha-EconomicdevelopmentA

572

... ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★

State-sponsored industrial development authority ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Oklahoma .............................. Oregon .................................... Pennsylvania ......................... Rhode Island ......................... South Carolina ......................

South Dakota ......................... Tennessee ............................... Texas ....................................... Utah ........................................ Vermont .................................

Virginia .................................. Washington ............................ West Virginia ......................... Wisconsin ............................... Wyoming ................................

Puerto Rico ............................

State authority or agency revenue bond financing ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

City and/or County General obligation bond financing ★

★ ... ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

State loans for building construction ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

State loans for equipment machinery

Source: Site Selection, November 2004. Note: A significant number of footnotes are published with these charts in the November 2004 issue of Site Selection Magazine. For more information or to obtain a set of the footnotes, contact Editor Adam Bruns at adam.bruns@conway.com. Key: ★— Yes . . —No; or state/jurisdiction did not respond to survey.

Privately sponsored development credit corporation

State or other jurisdiction

State authority or agency general obligation bond financing

572 City and/or county revenue bond financing

FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE FOR INDUSTRY — Continued City and/or county loans for building construction ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

City and/or county loans for equipment, machinery ...

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

State loan guarantees for building construction ★

... ... ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

State loan guarantees for equipment, machinery ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

City and/or county loan guarantees for building construction ...

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

City and/or county loan guarantees for equipment, machinery ...

... ... ... ★ ...

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

State financing aid for existing plant expansion ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

State matching funds for city and/or county industrial financing programs ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

State incentive for establishing industrial plants in areas of high unemployment ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

City and/or county incentive for establishing industrial plants in areas of high unemployment ★

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

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... ... ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ... ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ... ★ ★

State or other jurisdiction

Alabama ................................. Alaska ..................................... Arizona ................................... Arkansas ................................ California ...............................

Colorado ................................ Connecticut ............................ Delaware ................................ Florida .................................... Georgia ...................................

Hawaii .................................... Idaho ....................................... Illinois ..................................... Indiana ................................... Iowa ........................................

Kansas .................................... Kentucky ................................ Louisiana ............................... Maine ...................................... Maryland ...............................

Massachusetts ....................... Michigan ................................ Minnesota .............................. Mississippi ............................. Missouri .................................

Montana ................................. Nebraska ................................ Nevada .................................... New Hampshire ..................... New Jersey .............................

New Mexico ........................... New York ................................ North Carolina ...................... North Dakota ........................ Ohio ........................................

See footnotes at end of table.

★ ★ ★ ... ★

Corporate income tax exemption

00Hb-EconomicdevelopmentB

Personal Income tax exemption

Table B TAX INCENTIVES FOR INDUSTRY

Excise tax exemption ... ★ ... ★ ...

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ... ★ ... ★

... ... ... ... ★

★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

Tax exemption or moratorium on land, capital improvements ★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

... ... ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Tax exemption or moratorium on equipment, machinery ★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Inventory tax exemption on goods in transit (freeport) ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Tax exemption on manufacturers’ inventories ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Sales/use tax exemption on new equipment ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Tax exemption on raw materials used in manufacturing ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Tax incentive for creation of jobs ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Tax incentive for industrial investment ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Tax credits for use of specified state products ... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ★ ...

Tax stabilization agreements for specified industries ... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

... ... ★ ... ...

★ ... ... ... ...

... ★ ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

Tax exemption to encourage research and development ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

Accelerated depreciation of industrial equipment ★ ... ★ ... ★

★ ★ ... ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

... ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ... ★

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

573


574

★ ★ ★ ... ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ... ... ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Oklahoma .............................. Oregon .................................... Pennsylvania ......................... Rhode Island ......................... South Carolina ......................

South Dakota ......................... Tennessee ............................... Texas ....................................... Utah ........................................ Vermont .................................

Virginia .................................. Washington ............................ West Virginia ......................... Wisconsin ............................... Wyoming ................................

Puerto Rico ............................

... ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ... ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

Tax exemption or moratorium on land, capital improvements ★

★ ... ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Tax exemption or moratorium on equipment, machinery ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

... ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Inventory tax exemption on goods in transit (freeport)

Source: Site Selection, November 2004. Note: A significant number of footnotes are published with these charts in the November 2004 issue of Site Selection magazine. For more information or to obtain a set of the footnotes, contact Editor Adam Bruns at adam.bruns@conway.com.

★ ... ... ... ...

Corporate income tax exemption

00Hb-EconomicdevelopmentB

State or other jurisdiction

Excise tax exemption

574 Personal Income tax exemption

TAX INCENTIVES FOR INDUSTRY — Continued

Tax exemption on manufacturers’ inventories ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Sales/use tax exemption on new equipment

Tax exemption on raw materials used in manufacturing ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Tax incentive for creation of jobs ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ... ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Tax incentive for industrial investment

Key: ★—Yes . . .—No; or state/jurisdiction did not respond to survey.

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Tax credits for use of specified state products ★

... ... ★ ... ...

... ... ... ... ...

★ ... ★ ★ ...

Tax stabilization agreements for specified industries ★

★ ... ... ... ...

... ... ... ... ★

★ ... ... ★ ...

Tax exemption to encourage research and development ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ★ ... ...

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

Accelerated depreciation of industrial equipment ★

★ ... ★ ★ ...

★ ★ ... ★ ★

★ ★ ★ ★ ★

ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY

State Science and Technology: Best Practices By Marc Holzer and Richard Schwester In a global economy it will be difficult for states to maintain an economic base as low-cost producers of goods and services. States must, therefore, foster innovation and entrepreneurship in order to bring advanced technologies to market ahead of their global competitors. If our country is to maintain its current standard of living, then government must support innovation, particularly in science and technology, where it already has a competitive advantage over other nations. In a global economy it will be difficult for states to maintain an economic base as low-cost producers of goods and services. States must, therefore, foster innovation and entrepreneurship in order to bring advanced technologies to market ahead of their global competitors. If our country is to maintain its current standard of living, then government must support innovation, particularly in science and technology, where it already has a competitive advantage over other nations. This article begins with a comparative examination of science and technology efforts throughout Georgia, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. Emphasis is placed on programs dealing with university research and development (R&D), science and technology business assistance, in addition to collaborative efforts between university and industry leaders. All of these states recognize the opportunities for future economic growth inherent in R&D investments, and consequently have invested significant resources toward bolstering their respective science and technology infrastructures. This article further examines the governance structure of state science and technology entities, and concludes with recommendations that we hope will enable states to better harness their science and technology capabilities.

State Science and Technology Initiatives University R&D and Industry Collaboration The Georgia Research Alliance’s Innovation Fund encourages research collaborations among the state’s academic and business communities. The purpose is to foster technology development with commercial viability. The GRA’s Innovation Fund fosters close collaboration between university scientists and their industry counterparts. The program provides direct linkages to the problems and interests of industry, and directs the capabilities of Georgia’s research universities to specific industry needs, such as advanced

communications, bioscience, nanoscience and advanced materials. Proposals are accepted from the University of Georgia, the Medical College of Georgia, Emory University, Clark Atlanta University, the Georgia Institute of Technology and Georgia State University. Innovation Fund recipients are awarded a maximum of $100,000, which must be matched by a Georgia-based industrial partner. A primary focus of the New Jersey Commission on Science and Technology (NJCST) has been strengthening ties between university researchers and industry leaders through innovation zones. Innovation zones are geographic areas within close proximity to universities. Technology businesses located within these zones are eligible for financial incentives and support services (e.g. access to university facilities). Financial incentives include springboard funding (up to $300,000) for businesses working toward product development with commercial viability. The New York State Office of Science, Technology, and Academic Research (NYSTAR) is an impressive model regarding university-based science and technology research. NYSTAR’s Centers of Excellence, which are housed at universities throughout the state, are designed to focus on emerging technologies within high-growth markets. The 2002– 2003 state budget allocated $250 million for further development of the Centers of Excellence, which focus on research pertaining to bioinformatics, environmental systems, nano-electronics, photonics and information technology. It is expected that the state’s $250 million investment will leverage an addition $1 billion from private sector and federal government sources. NYSTAR’s Gen*NY*sis (Generating Employment through New York State Science) Center program provides the intellectual infrastructure necessary for the expansion of high technology research and the achievement of scientific breakthroughs. Gen*NY*sis Centers emphasize the life sciences, The Council of State Governments

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY biotechnology, biomaterials and biomedical engineering research, which will help promote economic development through the creation of new bioscience and technology-based businesses. The 2002–2003 state budget allocated $225 million for the Gen*NY*sis Center program. NYSTAR has further stressed the importance of moving the state’s scientific and technological know how from the laboratory to the marketplace. NYSTAR’s Centers for Advanced Technology (CATs) are designed to promote collaborative S&T research among the state’s university and industry leaders. Emphasis is placed on R&D efforts that lead to commercially viable technologies and processes. Science and Technology Business Assistance The Massachusetts Technology Development Corporation (MTDC) represents a unique model in terms of science and technology business assistance. The MTDC is a state-controlled venture capital corporation that works to create technology-based employment, attract greater private investment in Massachusetts’ technology companies, and encourage entrepreneurship. The MTDC operates three capital investment programs, the Traditional Investment Fund and two Commonwealth Investment Fund Programs. The Traditional Investment Fund is geared toward technology companies seeking between $1 and $3 million. The MTDC differs from the traditional venture capital corporation given its willingness to invest in start-up companies that have yet to establish a record of accomplishment. Approximately 80 percent of MTDC investments are made to start-ups. The MTDC typically provides between $300,000 and $500,000 of a total investment of $1 to $3 million. Private and co-investors provide the balance, and investments are made as equity, debt or a combination. The Commonwealth Fund I was started in 1993 with $3 million from the MTDC and $1 million from two of the state’s largest lending institutions, BancBoston and Fleet Bank. The Commonwealth Fund I makes investments ranging from $200,000 to $300,000 in follow-up financing for science and technology start-ups. The Commonwealth Fund Investment Program II established a $15 million investment pool. This investment program began in July 2000 with $12 million from MTDC, and an additional $2 million from BancBoston and $1 million from the Essex Regional Retirement Board. Initial investments range from $300,000 to $600,000. From FY1980 through FY1999, early stage technology investments have yielded a 17 percent rate 576

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of return, which compares favorably to private seed and start-up venture capital funds. Since 1980, cumulative net equity gains from MTDC investments have totaled over $28 million. The MTDC has been a self-supporting state corporation since 1988. Through December 1999, 55 MTDC companies reported employing a total of 10,000 individuals, generating an annual payroll of approximately $500 million, and state tax revenues totaling more than $24 million. The Ben Franklin Technology Partners (BFTP) in Pennsylvania is a regional network that offers direct assistance to technology-based companies and venture capital organizations that support tech-based companies throughout Pennsylvania. There are four regional technology partners, which are funded by the Pennsylvania Department of Economic Development. Base funding for the technology partners is approximately $27.5 million. The BFTP support the development and application of new products and technologies among entrepreneurs and companies. This results in the creation of jobs, the successful development of promising start-ups, and the growth of established companies. The BFTP annually select a number of clients in which to invest. High priority is given to clients possessing the potential to create jobs. Interested client representatives must meet with Ben Franklin staff to discuss their vision and goals. If there is a match between the company’s objectives and Ben Franklin’s, the staff will discuss potential resources and services available. In cases where significant funds are needed, and the potential results of the assistance will produce sufficient benefits to the regional economy, the Ben Franklin Partners aid the client in preparing a formal request for funding. Investment recipients are expected to repay BFTP, which ensures the solvency of the program. In addition to providing direct funding support, BFTP draw upon outside sources of support. For example, a Ben Franklin Partner may solicit expert assistance from university faculty members or proven business professionals in areas such as strategy development, market positioning, acquiring capital, business planning, human resources and technical issues/ opportunities. The Technology Development Corporation of Maryland (TEDCO) has, in part, concentrated its efforts in the area of business incubation. TEDCO’s incubator activities are guided by the assistance of a Business Incubator Technical Advisory Committee. TEDCO’s board of directors appoints members to the committee who represent a cross-section of the state’s business incubation, real estate and entrepre-

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY neurial communities. TEDCO further provides direct financial assistance to existing state incubators, operating under the assumption that TEDCO investments will help leverage additional resources. Similarly, the New Jersey Commission on Science and Technology has emphasized business incubation as part of its science and technology business development activities. NYSTAR’s Science and Technology Law Center provides resources for small and early stage companies working to succeed within an increasingly complex marketplace. The Law Center seeks to educate entrepreneurs and business owners about complex legal issues relevant to the protection of intellectual property, technology transfer, patent applications, licensing agreements, capital procurement and university/industrial partnerships. The Law Center further examines issues relevant to emerging industry sectors that could potentially influence New York companies and universities, and promotes economic development through university-based research and product commercialization in high technology industries.

Advisory Function The North Carolina Board of Science and Technology (NBCST) was established to promote and support the growth of the state’s scientific, engineering, and industrial research capabilities. The board does not run any projects or programs per se; rather, it serves in an advisory capacity to the governor and the General Assembly. The NCBST is charged with developing strategic plans. The most recent strategic plan, Vision 2030, outlines 10 recommendations. Each recommendation fits into the concept of economic development through a rededication to science and technology-based endeavors. The Wisconsin Technology Council (WTC) is an independent, non-profit corporation created in 2001 by the state Legislature. The WTC performs a strategic planning function. For example, the WTC seeks to build Wisconsin’s Technology Clusters, establish Research Centers of Excellence, and create an Institute for Interdisciplinary Research.

S&T Governance Structures The Massachusetts Technology Development Cor-

Figure A: Technology Development Corporation of Maryland Department of Business and Economic Development

TEDCO Board of Directors Appointed by Governor with Senate Approval

President and Executive Director

STANDING COMMITTEES

Staff

Executive Committee

Finance and Audit Committee

Technical Advisory Committee

SBIC Selection Committee

EDA Project Advisory Committee

Nominating and Board Policy Committee

NSF Project Committee

Business Incubation Committee

Federal Laboratory Partnership Program Committee

University Technology Transfer Committee

Source: Marc Holzer and Richard Schwester, 2004.

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY poration (MTDC) is a venture capital corporation by the governor, NYSTAR is headed by an execucreated by the state legislature in 1978. The MTDC tive director who is appointed by the governor and seeks to create technology-based jobs, attract greater confirmed by the state Senate. The executive direcprivate investment in the state’s technology compa- tor supervises NYSTAR’s programs and staff. The nies, and encourage entrepreneurship. An eleven- agency maintains an Advisory Council, headed by a member board of directors governs the MTDC, which chairman who is appointed by the governor. The govis responsible for approving all capital investments. ernor, the majority leader of the Senate, or the speaker MTDC Board members include private investors, of the Assembly appoint the remaining members of legal experts, entrepreneurial management consult- NYSTAR’s Advisory Council. The council works ants, business leaders, academics, and government with NYSTAR to ensure that the NYSTAR’s funding is channeled toward high-technology R&D havrepresentatives. Established in 1998, the Technology Development ing the potential to engender tangible economic benCorporation of Maryland (TEDCO) works to foster efits. The Advisory Council is comprised of acatechnology commercialization, create high technol- demic, business, and scientific community leaders. ogy businesses, and support university-based R&D. Council members drawn from the public are expected The Department of Business and Economic Devel- to have at least five years of scientific or entrepreopment provides TEDCO with funding and legal neurial experience with technologically oriented council through the attorney general’s office. TEDCO is governed by a 15member board, which is appointed by Figure B: New York State Office of Science, the governor with advice and consent Technology, and Academic Research of the Senate. Board members must be residents of Maryland, representing the GOVERNOR non-profit research sector, venture capital financing, technology-based businesses, the general public, and colNYSTAR leges and universities. The Board is State Agency within the geographically representative, and its Executive Department responsibilities include: reviewing and auditing financial statements, approvExecutive Director Adsvisory Council Chairman ing a fiscal year budget for operations, Appointed by the Governor Appointed by the Governor and confirmed by State Senate program expenditures, and investments in technology development. Figure A Advisory Council Members NYSTAR shows the governance structure of Appointed by the Governor, Staff TEDCO. Senate Majority Leader, and Assembly Speaker The New Jersey Commission on Science and Technology is consists Source: Marc Holzer and Richard Schwester, 2004. of eight individuals representing the public, two individuals representing the state legislature, and two university presidents business. NYSTAR’s governance structure is pre( New J er sey I n s tit ut e of Te ch n ology a nd sented below in Figure B. The North Carolina Board of Science and TechPrinceton University). Three ex-officio members represent the Commerce and Economic Growth nology (NCBST) serves in an advisory capacity to Commission, the Department of Education, and the governor and the legislature. The NCBST is the Governor’s Office. There are two standing housed in the Department of Commerce, and its committees of the Commission, the Technology members are statutorily pre-determined. The Business Development Committee and the Sci- NCBST’s membership includes: • The governor; entific Fields Committee. They play a role in the • The secretary of commerce; determination of awards in their respective ar• One member from the University of North eas. Carolina at Chapel Hill; The New York State Office of Science, Technol• One member from North Carolina State ogy, and Academic Research (NYSTAR) is a state University; agency within the Executive Department. Overseen 578

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY • Two members from other components of the University of North Carolina; • One member from Duke University; • One member from a private college or university other than Duke; • One member from the Research Triangle Institute; • One member from the Microelectronics Center of North Carolina; • One member from the North Carolina Biotechnology Center; • Four members from private industry in North Carolina; • Two members from public agencies in North Carolina; and • Two members appointed by the General Assembly. By statutorily pre-determining the NCBST’s makeup, there is a reasonable measure of assurance that the board is bipartisan and represents the interests of the state’s academic and business communities. Similar to the NCBST, the Wisconsin Technology Council (WTC) is an independent organization created by the state legislature in 2001. The WTC serves in an advisory capacity to the governor and the legislature, and it consists of 41 individuals representing high-technology businesses, academic institutions, venture capital organizations and government. The president and

Executive Committee of the WTC manage the dayto-day operations. The Ben Franklin Technology Development Authority governs the Ben Franklin Technology Partners. The director of statewide affairs for the BFTP is responsible for coordinating the technology partner’s involvement in key initiatives undertaken by the state. The director of statewide affairs further serves as the primary liaison among the four Ben Franklin partners, implements opportunities for joint initiatives, and serves as liaison to the governor and the legislature. Each Ben Franklin Technology Partner maintains a board of directors. The boards are responsible for approving all funding and investment recommendations. Figure C below shows the governance structure of both the Ben Franklin Technology Development Authority and the Ben Franklin Technology Partners. The Georgia Research Alliance (GRA) is a nonprofit, independent company representing a public-private partnership. The GRA emphasizes economic development by better leveraging the research capabilities of the state’s university infrastructure. The GRA further assists in the development of science and technology-based industry, commerce and businesses. This model is distinctive in that it is not a government entity, yet the GRA serves as the linchpin for a powerful partnership that includes government, academia, and

Figure C: Ben Franklin Technology Development Authority and Ben Franklin Technology Partners Pennsylvania Department of Community and Economic Development Ben Franklin Technology Development Authority (BFTDA) BFTDA Board of Directors Director of Statewide Affairs

Ben Franklin Technology Partners (BFTP) BFTP Central and Northern PA

BFTP Northeastern PA

BFTP Southeastern PA

BFTP Southwestern PA

Source: Marc Holzer and Richard Schwester, 2004.

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY the state’s business community.

Recommendations Based Upon a Review of the Programs Above Recommendation 1 Addressing the need for qualified policy advice and coordination of science and technology initiatives is imperative, and therefore we recommend the creation of a science and technology advisor in the office of the governor. This position would be similar to the national science advisor, who is appointed by the president to oversee the National Institute of Health, the National Science Foundation, and to advise the president on science and technology policy. The science and technology advisor should assist in coordination and priority setting, and he/she must have impeccable credentials in the areas of science and technology. We recommend that at a minimum the advisor have an earned doctorate in a relevant field of science and technology, a strong record of research and publications, and leadership experience in both the public and private sectors. The science and technology advisor should coordinate a statewide strategic planning process for science and technology. The strategic planning process should address the goals below. The science and technology advisor should articulate the specific goals and growth investment areas for state development after a due diligence process to identify such opportunities.

recommendations to the governor in conjunction with the science and technology advisor. The Science and Technology Advisory Council should consist of apolitical, high profile scientists and university and industry leaders with knowledge of the implications of science and technology on public policy. The Science and Technology Advisory Council should consist of eight members, four with expertise in R&D in science and technology and four members to represent the leaders of science and technology industries. The advisory council should assist the governor in setting priorities for New Jersey’s research and economic development priorities, and should provide guidance to the governor’s science and technology advisor relating to the statewide strategic planning process.

Recommendation 3 A statewide strategic planning process, for all state agencies with an interest in economic and business development in science and technology, must be implemented. We recommend that the governor’s science and technology advisor coordinate this strategic planning process. The statewide science and technology strategic plan process should be updated annually and should: 1. Identify the stakeholders in science and technology throughout the state and determine areas and initiatives that stakeholders deem to be a priority for New Jersey workers. 2. Identify the areas where the state deficient based on stakeholder views and other science and technolRecommendation 2 ogy research. We recommend the creation of a Science and Tech3. Develop a timetable for what is necessary and nology Advisory Council to make strategic and policy feasible, and which may well incorporate objectives beyond mere incrementalism. 4. Identify goals, and how the state’s science and Table A: State Science and Technology Models technology programs might or should address State S&T Entity Model those goals. Georgia Georgia Research Alliance (GRA) Non-profit Model 5. Require state agenMassachusetts Massachusetts Technology Venture Capital Model Development Corporation (MTDC) cies to benchmark their Maryland Technology Development Corporation Business and University Assistance Model programs to these strategic (TEDCO( goals. New Jersey New Jersey Commission on Science Business and University Assistance Model 6. Recognize that other and Technology (NJCST) states, and their public reNew York New York State Office of Science, Business and University Assistance Model Technology and Academic Research search universities, are (NYSTAR) competing for federal reNorth Carolina North Carolina Board of Science and Advisory Model search dollars and private Technology research funding. Pennsylvania Ben Franklin Technology Development Business and University Assistance Model Development Authority (BFTDA) The globalization of the Wisconsin Wisconsin Technology Council (WTC) Advisory Model American economy, inSource: Marc Holzer and Richard Schwester, 2004. creased commercial productivity from improved 580

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SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY computer and information technologies and processes, as well as increased mobility have eroded many traditional employment opportunities throughout the United States. The continued prosperity of the United States since World War II has been enhanced by the recognition at the federal level of the role of longer-term scientific research in future economic development. To remain competitive in the emerging knowledge-based economy, states must continue to develop and maintain a world-class university research environment that will create innovations in technology. Those innovations can then be transferred to the commercial knowledge market.

References BFTP (Ben Franklin Technology Partners). “Ben Franklin Program Overview.” http://www.nep.benfranklin. org/about/progWrks.cfm. GRA (Georgia Research Alliance). “Innovation Fund Program Announcement.” http://www.gra.org/documents/ FY05_Program_Announcement.doc. MTDC (Massachusetts Technology Development Corporation). 2000. “Annual Report.” http://www.mtdc.com/ annualreport.html. NCBST (North Carolina board of Science and Technology). Mapping the Vision 2: Vision 2030. http://www. ncscienceandtechnology.com/PDF/Vision2030/Mapping TheVision2.pdf. NJCST (New Jersey Commission on Science and Technology). “Innovation Zones.” http://www.state.nj.us/ scitech/iz_what.html. NYSTAR (New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research). “Centers for Advanced Technology.” http://www.nystar.state.ny.us/cats.htm.

NYSTAR (New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research). “Gen*NY*sis Centers.” http://www.nystar.state.ny.us/gennysis.htm. NYSTAR (New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research). “Research Center Programs.” http://www.nystar.state.ny.us/research_programs.htm. NYSTAR (New York State Office of Science, Technology and Academic Research). “Science and Technology Law Center.” http://www.nystar.state.ny.us/stlc.htm. State Science and Technology Institute (SSTI). 2000. “SSTI Program Brief: Massachusetts Technology Development Corporation.” March. http://www.ssti.org. TEDCO (Maryland Technology Development Corporation). 2004. “Annual Report.” http://www.marylandtedco. org/resources/publication_pdfs/2004Report_Final.pdf. Wisconsin Technology Council. 2002. Vision 2020: A Model Wisconsin Economy. http://www.wisconsin technologycouncil.com/vision_2020Vision_2020_ web2.pdf.

About the Authors Marc Holzer is chair and professor of the Graduate Department of Public Administration, Rutgers UniversityNewark and executive director of the National Center for Public Productivity. He holds a Ph.D. in Political Science and a Master of Public Administration degree, both from the University of Michigan. Holzer is a past president of the American Society for Public Administration (2000– 2001) and a fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration. Richard Schwester is a senior research associate for the National Center for Public Productivity in the Graduate Department of Public Administration, Rutgers University—Newark. Schwester received his B.A. from Johns Hopkins University and his M.A. from Rutgers UniversityNewark, both in political science.

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RURAL DEVELOPMENT

The New Rural Development Challenge: Revitalizing Rural America By Rob Atkinson In the last decade, many rural areas have been left behind. Yet federal and state rural development efforts have not proven up to the task. As a result, it’s time for a bold new approach to revitalizing rural America based on building competitive rural economies. Fundamental changes in technology, markets and organizations are redrawing our nation’s economic map and leaving many rural areas behind. Yet our de-facto federal rural policy—providing massive subsidies to a shrinking number of farmers—does little to help develop competitive rural economies or boost opportunity for most rural residents. Moreover, most states treat rural development as a poor stepchild to their core economic development efforts. As a result, it’s time for a bold new approach to revitalizing rural America based on helping rural areas build competitive economies and enabling more Americans to fulfill their desire to live in less densely populated places. To do this, we need a new national policy that weans rural areas off farm subsidies and instead invests the savings in rural development. We also need new state policies that make rural development a priority. Based on a recent report from the Progressive Policy Institute, this article examines what’s happened to rural economies and discusses what states can do to revive rural growth.

How and Why Rural Economies Have Suffered During the last two decades rural America has suffered. In 2001, 19.8 percent of Americans lived in non-metro areas, down from 21.8 percent in 1980. Jobs in rural areas grew 2.2 percentage points slower than metro areas in the 1980s and 3.6 percentage points slower in the 1990s (10.3 percent vs. 13.9 percent). In the 1990s almost half of rural counties lost both population and employment. Rural Americans now make on average $10,900 less annually than their urban counterparts, up from $5,893 less in 1978. This is not to say that some rural areas have not done well; many rural counties with retirement-based economies, regional trade centers, scenic amenities, or proximity to metro areas prospered. But most did not. The result is a disturbing pattern in many states as “New Economy metropoles” have grown with rural areas lagging behind. For example, between 1989 582

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and 1998 employment in the greater Atlanta region increased by 3.4 percent annually, compared to around 2.1 percent in rural Georgia. In North Carolina employment grew 16.3 percent in areas like Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill, but only 7.7 percent in rural areas. The Chicago metro area grew 12 percent in the 1990s, while rural Illinois grew 1 percent. As a result, many state leaders are calling attention to the problem of “two states”—a few prosperous and growing metro areas with stagnant areas in the remainder of the state. There are a number of reasons why rural economies have suffered. Because key rural economic engines – farming, mining and manufacturing – have enjoyed significantly higher productivity growth, they employ a declining share of workers. In contrast, fast-growing knowledge and technology-based industries make up a much smaller share of rural economies than they do of metro economies. In part this is because as a group, rural workers have less education. For example, in the South, 28.1 percent of metro residents have a college degree compared to 15.1 percent of non-metro residents. Many rural areas have less of other key knowledge economy ingredients, including entrepreneurs, universities and colleges, high-speed data communications infrastructure, and frequent and inexpensive air service. Finally, globalization threatens a core advantage rural areas have long relied on: low costs. For many decades rural regions have relied on the “filtering down” of more mature economic activities, especially branch manufacturing plants, from urban areas. However, globalization means that many establishments competing on costs instead “filter out” to developing nations. As a result, many rural regions find themselves squeezed between low-cost developing nations and high-skill metropolitan areas. This is one reason why since 1998, rural manufacturing jobs have decreased at a faster rate than urban manufacturing jobs. While these changes present challenges, the prospects for rural economies are not all bleak. In fact, many rural areas may be able to capitalize on a number of new developments. First, the digital economy is cre-

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RURAL DEVELOPMENT ating an ever-more footloose economy, which allows an increasing share of economic activity now located in high cost metro areas to relocate to lower cost areas, and not all these IT-enabled service jobs will go offshore. For example, Northwest Airlines recently opened a 600 person travel agency booking office in the small town of Minot, N.D. Second, as more people retire (35 million Americans are 50 to 59 years of age) many will choose rural life. Finally, as housing prices and traffic congestion grow in large metro areas, rural areas become more attractive for businesses and residents.

What Should States Do? In the midst of these mixed set of forces, states are by no means helpless to advance rural economic development. But states would have a much easier time if Washington was doing its job. Unfortunately, federal rural policy is still seen as synonymous with farm policy, and expensive farm subsidies ($25 billion in 2001) now do little to create sustainable rural economies. As a result, states should call for the federal government to phase out farm subsidies, along with our major trading partners, and reinvest a portion of the savings in a new Rural Prosperity Corporation whose major activity would be to make matching grants to states for rural development efforts. However, states shouldn’t hold their breath waiting for change from Washington. They can and should take a number of steps on their own.

1. Recognize That Balanced Growth is Good For Rural and Metro Areas Because rural development is often viewed as social policy to help needy regions rather than as a key component of economic development policy, it is usually the poor stepchild when it comes to competing for resources. While states spend billions every year on economic development (including on tax incentives), little of it is focused on rural revitalization. To generate support for robust rural development efforts state officials need to recognize that a more balanced distribution of economic activity helps not just rural areas, but also metropolitan economies. This is true because adding even more jobs and residents to metros like Boston, San Francisco-OaklandSan Jose, and Washington, D.C. will only raise costs there and hurt the quality of life of residents and competitive position of businesses. In contrast, encouraging growth in places like Springfield, Mass., Fresno, Calif., and Hagerstown, Md. would ease cost pressures in large metros while helping less populated regions. Rural growth acts as a relief valve,

reducing the growth of congestion and costs in large metropolitan areas, and making the entire state economy more competitive and able to grow with fewer of the problems stemming from growth.

2. Revamp State Economic Development Programs to Explicitly Focus on Boosting Rural Economies Few states have developed comprehensive rural development strategies and of those that did, most are poorly linked to the state’s overall economic development strategy. However, a few states have begun to develop more serious strategies for helping rural regions. Georgia’s OneGeorgia Authority oversees economic development aimed at lagging parts of the state and provides grants and loans to 16 of the state’s most economically distressed communities. North Carolina has created five types of regions, with tier one being the most economically distressed and tier five being the least economically distressed. Businesses in the lower tiers are eligible for more generous and more easily obtained business tax credits (e g., R&D credit).

3. Target Rural Development Efforts to a Smaller Number of Rural Centers With the Potential for Growth In a knowledge-based economy where “critical mass” is increasingly central to success, some places that are too small or remote will find it difficult to succeed. Infrastructure providers, such as airlines and telecommunications companies, may not serve a place unless it is large enough to be economical. Moreover, companies employing skilled workers are unlikely to locate in a place without a pool of available trained workers. As a result, if states are to create the most jobs in rural regions, they should target development efforts to places with the potential to be the regional anchors for growth that surrounding rural residents can commute to for employment. The alternative—spreading out resources widely and thinly—while politically easier, is not likely to generate as many jobs in rural areas. These growth centers do not have to be metro areas. Towns of 10,000 to 20,000 people can serve as growth poles, especially if they have amenities to attract knowledge workers and have adequate infrastructure, especially high-speed telecommunications connections.

4. Co-fund New Economy Business Development Strategies For rural America to prosper it will have to grow new businesses and expand existing ones, ideally The Council of State Governments

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RURAL DEVELOPMENT ones providing better paying jobs. To do this, states need new approaches to economic development that stress new success factors, including workers’ skills, entrepreneurial energy, and technology transfer. Some states have already implemented innovative and effective initiatives in these areas. The Minnesota Technology Corporation Investment Fund, the Iowa Product Development Corporation, the Kentucky Rural Innovation Fund, and the Small Enterprise Growth Fund of Maine all focus at least part of their investments on rural areas. North Carolina’s Institute for Rural Entrepreneurship helps spur business development in small towns losing jobs due to plant closures. States can also help existing companies become more competitive. Kansas State University runs a technical assistance program to help agricultural coops develop value-added food processes. South Dakota’s Value-Added Agriculture fund supports feasibility and marketing research for agricultural processing projects. The Vermont Sustainable Jobs Fund helps small business form business networks. One such network was the Vermont Quality Meats Cooperative, a 46-member co-op to produce, market, sell and transport meat directly to restaurants. In North Carolina, the Catawba County Hosiery Technology Center helps rural hosiery firms become more competitive through the adoption of new business practices. States can also help spur new technologies that will lead to expanded rural-based production. South Dakota is working to boost wind energy production. Illinois’ Renewable Fuels Development Program assists in the growth of renewable fuels plants. Minnesota’s Natural Resource Research Institute conducts applied research and development to help develop new commercial applications for the state’s natural resources, including timber and iron.

5. Facilitate Access to High-Speed Telecommunications Access to high speed broadband telecommunications is critical if a region wants to grow and attract information-based businesses. However, for some rural areas, low levels of demand combined with higher costs means that companies often cannot make an adequate return on investment. As a result, states need to work to ensure that rural regions, particularly growth centers, have high-speed broadband connections.

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States can do several things to help facilitate the rollout of broadband. Michigan preempts local authorities over rights-of-way for telecommunications use and reduces the fees that can be charged for access, while giving telecom providers tax credits for rights-of-ways fees. The Massachusetts Technology Collaborative sparked the creation of Berkshire Connect that aggregated demand for high-speed Internet services and used that demand to induce a private vendor chosen through a competitive proposal process to construct a high-speed data network.

6. Move Selected Government Jobs Out of High-Cost Metro Areas to Rural Growth Poles While most of what states can do to influence rural growth patterns depends on indirect actions—for example, boosting skills of rural workers—there is one area that governments have direct control over— the location of government jobs. State governments employ over 5 million workers, most of them in state capitals and other metropolitan areas. These jobs can play an important role in rural economic development. Many government jobs, including routine “back office” government functions, are located in crowded, expensive metropolitan areas, even when there is no compelling business reason for them being there. These kinds of jobs can be relocated to rural growth poles, allowing governments to cut costs while maintaining the same level of service quality.

Conclusion As we enter the 21st century it is time to recognize that the economic well-being of rural America is no longer synonymous with the well being of agriculture. If rural America is to prosper, it must develop new industries with sustainable competitive advantages. To help rural communities do that, we need new approaches to rural development from Congress and states. About the Author Rob Atkinson is vice president of the Progressive Policy Institute (PPI) and director of PPI’s Technology and New Economy Project. He is also author, The Past and Future of America’s Economy: Waves of Innovation that Power Cycles of Growth (Edward Elgar Press, 2005). While at PPI he has written groundbreaking reports on a wide range of new economy issues, including “Reversing Rural America’s Economic Decline,” a report on how the New Economy is transforming rural America.

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Trends and Issues in State Highways and Transportation By John Horsley State transportation departments that supply roads, bridges and transit face tough challenges. With the U.S. population projected to grow steadily, increasing vehicle miles traveled, and booming freight traffic, officials are squeezing efficiency from current funds even as they seek more. In coming years, it will be important to build a case for the value of transportation with the public and explore a variety of construction and financing approaches.

Providing the United States with the finest transportation system in the world has always been a challenge for the providers—chiefly the state departments of transportation, using a combination of state and federal funds. But several trends can be seen that may make the challenge more daunting in the future. These include population growth and surging freight traffic. In the short term, delayed action on a federal surface-transportation bill has cut some funding from the state-federal pipeline and introduced uncertainty, hampering states’ ability to plan and proceed on needed projects. Over the past 40 years, the United States funded and built the highways and bridges the nation’s people and economy needed. Construction of the 47,000-mile Interstate Highway System surged from the 1960s through the 1980s. The 1980s and 1990s saw dramatic increases in investment in highways and transit by all levels of government. During the period between 1982 and 2002, the nation’s total capital investment more than doubled, according to the General Accounting Office (GAO)—but state and local highway investment during the period increased at twice the rate of federal investment. “Specifically, state and local investment increased 166 percent, from $14.1 billion to $37.6 billion in real terms, whereas the federal investment increased 83 percent from $15.5 billion to $28.3 billion.” 1 During the 1990s, state investment in transit increased substantially, with combined capital and operating spending rising from $5.17 billion in 1990 to $8.94 billion in 2000 (adjusted to 2003 dollars). During the same period, federal transit assistance increased from $3.84 billion to $5.52 billion, inflation-adjusted2 (see Table A). From 2002 to 2004, the states’ relative share of total transportation spending dropped, largely due to the effects on overall state budgets of severe nationwide recession. As most state constitutions contain a ban on deficit spending, many states tapped their

designated transportation trust funds in order to maintain balanced overall state budgets, pending the return of stronger tax revenues following the austerity period. The National Association of State Budget Officers (NASBO), in its 2003 State Expenditure Report, noted that the states appear to be fighting their way back from the trough of the recession, putting $92.9 billion into transportation spending in fiscal 2003, or 8.2 percent of all state expenditures—as compared with 3.5 percent in fiscal 2002. However, “Following the fiscal downturn, states are still holding down spending on transportation projects,” NASBO reported. “Estimates of fiscal 2004 total state transportation spending indicate growth of only 1.5 percent.”3 The expiration of the six-year Transportation Equity Act for the 21st Century—the federal surfacetransportation financing act—in September 2003 led to a series of short-term extensions of that act by Congress, but left the states for several months without a clear blueprint for anticipated federal funds. As federal funding typically covers about 80 percent of most highway projects built by states with federal support, many states found it necessary to delay or cancel projects.4 Other states kept their projects’ momentum going by increasing the proportion of state funds, leading the GAO to note that in 2002, state and local governments contributed 54 percent of the total U.S. capital investment in highways.5 Even as state transportation departments back increased transit capacity and use technology to squeeze maximum efficiency out of existing assets, these trend lines point to an inescapable need for more highway capacity and to a need for greater reliability in the federal/state funding collaboration.

New Approaches by State DOTs Several states, recognizing that transportation needs are great and can only become more serious if not addressed immediately, have increased their The Council of State Governments

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Table A: State Disbursements for Highways: Highway Statistics 1983 and 2003 (in thousands of dollars) Year of expenditure dollars State or other jurisdiction

1983

2003

Alabama ........................... Alaska ............................... Arizona ............................. Arkansas .......................... California .........................

$ 628,732 323,665 462,628 345,327 2,161,263

$ 1,572,136 618,077 2,350,122 1,176,164 9,348,994

Colorado .......................... Connecticut ...................... Delaware .......................... Florida .............................. Georgia .............................

440,598 457,321 188,362 1,205,228 944,552

1,787,710 1,361,653 706,856 5,433,478 1,949,804

Hawaii .............................. Idaho ................................. Illinois ............................... Indiana ............................. Iowa ..................................

160,247 183,847 1,594,964 646,510 551,003

329,954 546,771 4,423,094 2,444,820 1,419,474

Kansas .............................. Kentucky .......................... Louisiana ......................... Maine ................................ Maryland .........................

367,930 769,978 916,446 180,652 836,680

1,395,878 2,152,146 1,424,317 578,684 1,792,279

Massachusetts ................. Michigan .......................... Minnesota ........................ Mississippi ....................... Missouri ...........................

617,041 988,644 734,958 456,108 568,348

3,546,525 2,798,807 1,959,322 1,014,057 2,119,856

Montana ........................... Nebraska .......................... Nevada .............................. New Hampshire ............... New Jersey .......................

221,583 326,741 208,125 171,634 803,924

577,989 838,680 806,564 447,836 3,767,079

New Mexico ..................... New York .......................... North Carolina ................ North Dakota .................. Ohio ..................................

347,009 1,876,156 744,572 186,619 1,291,013

861,637 5,829,420 3,012,676 379,015 3,660,208

Oklahoma ........................ Oregon .............................. Pennsylvania ................... Rhode Island ................... South Carolina ................

603,056 436,774 1,743,828 92,103 340,448

1,286,597 983,165 4,831,015 277,873 1,151,233

South Dakota ................... Tennessee ......................... Texas ................................. Utah .................................. Vermont ...........................

164,883 653,962 1,761,665 247,402 114,990

441,222 1,660,505 6,515,831 878,816 310,125

Virginia ............................ Washington ...................... West Virginia ................... Wisconsin ......................... Wyoming ..........................

908,685 836,616 467,210 638,698 236,192

2,998,344 2,220,022 1,107,307 1,903,804 467,505

Dist. of Columbia ............

93,692

358,242

Total ..................................

$32,248,612

$101,833,691

Source: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. Note: Includes all federal, state and local funding disbursed within a state by all agencies.

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transportation programs. In Indiana, for example, the state’s General Assembly approved a 3-cent gas tax increase effective Jan. 1, 2003. Two cents of that increase went to the state department of transportation, with 1 cent to be used for resurfacing and federal match and the other cent supporting a $450 million bonding program. The third cent went to local governments. The bonded projects all have been let for bids, and Indiana has had a transportation construction program of $754 million in fiscal 2003 and $775 million in fiscal 2004.6 Kansas lawmakers—after a couple of years holding back funding from a 10-year comprehensive transportation program first adopted in 1999—restored full funding in 2004 to the $13.2 billion program following a recessionary need to meet a state constitutional requirement for a balanced budget.7 Maine’s legislature has approved indexing the state gasoline tax to the Consumer Price Index starting in 2003, leading to a boost from 22 cents per gallon to 24.6 cents per gallon. State gasoline tax inflation indexing also is in effect in Florida, New York and Wisconsin.8 In Ohio, Gov. Robert Taft launched a long-range infrastructure investment plan dubbed “Access Ohio 2004-2030.” It was supported by a 6-cent-per-gallon gas tax increase phased in over three years. A $5 billion, 10-year highway construction plan is its primary goal. Late last December, the state’s Transportation Review Advisory Council gave the go-ahead for $3.7 billion in major highway work, setting in motion Ohio’s largest transportation initiative since the creation of the Interstate Highway System.9 Washington state has more than 40 major highway projects planned using funds approved by the legislature in 2003 through a 5-cent increase in the state gasoline tax. The $4.2 billion package also will fund public transit, rail and ferry improvements.10 In Wisconsin, Gov. Jim Doyle has promoted economic investment through his “Grow Wisconsin” program, including signing a budget providing $1.8 billion for highway rehabilitation and construction during the 2003–2005 biennium.11

Tolling on the Upswing Although the system that funds the national highway system and most state and local roads has always been a “user pays” approach—with gasoline taxes underpinning most road projects at all governmental levels—many states are finding tolling a way to accomplish expansion of capacity in crucial areas. Tolling is understood by the driving public to be

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TRANSPORTATION a very obvious “user pays” approach, and in an environment in which raising gasoline taxes can be difficult, tolling often supplies the resources needed, especially for high-cost major capital improvements in high-volume metropolitan areas. States are showing innovation in the use of tolls. For example, the Florida Turnpike has been engineered to have more electronic lanes that collect tolls without motorists having to stop—477 in all—than any other tolling network. Florida is also converting its Sawgrass Expressway into a fully automated system with no booths to interfere with traffic flow. Similarly, in New Jersey, two of every three transactions on the New Jersey Turnpike are handled electronically.12 In Texas, where the tradition of toll roads goes back half a century, there are now three regional tolling authorities, planning 331 new miles of roadway in the Houston area, 35 new tolled miles in the DallasFort Worth area and a 65-mile toll road east of Austin. The roads are popular and use of highway-speed toll-deduction tags has surged.13 In addition, Virginia has decided to build toll-financed high-occupancy toll or “HOT” lanes on a 14mile portion of the Capital Beltway. Carpools of three or more riders could travel the lanes for free, but others would pay tolls to use them. The lanes would also have changeable tolls that would increase as congestion did.14 A neighboring state, Maryland, is studying similar use of “express toll lanes” on portions of Interstate 95 north of Baltimore, I-95/I-495 on the Capital Beltway, I-270 and I-695 on the Baltimore Beltway.15

Increasing Commuter Contentment and Safety To reduce construction’s inconvenience for motorists and increase safety, several states also have planned and executed projects with lightning speed, compared to the rollout of similar work under traditional approaches. One increasing approach is termed “design-build,” in which construction begins on already-designed portions of a project even as design continues on other portions of it. The Colorado Department of Transportation has used design-build on its $1.7 billion renovation of Interstates 25 and 225 in the Denver area, a 5-1/2 year project that also will add light rail to the corridor. The 19-mile “T-Rex” project remains on schedule and on budget, with completion slated for September 2006.16 Another approach is full closure of an existing

roadway to traffic to allow its speedy rehabilitation. That angle has two goals: minimizing the inconvenience to the driving public of projects that go on and on, and increasing the safety of both motorists and workers by eliminating the need to perform reconstruction next to moving traffic. In Indiana, Interstates 65 and 70 needed extensive repair—a job that normally would take many months. But the routes provided major access to the Indianapolis 500 and the Brickyard 400, a pair of events that brought millions of dollars in commerce to the area each year. So a decision was made—in the name of access, cost savings and heightened work-zone safety—to get the work done in the nine weeks between the first race, on Memorial Day of 2003, and the second, over the following Labor Day weekend. Work involved restoring and supporting bridge decks, widening lanes and resurfacing the roadway.17 Many states also are using incentives to contractors to complete work on a challenging schedule. When a river barge struck a support pillar, causing the partial collapse of an Interstate 40 bridge over the Arkansas River in Oklahoma, state transportation officials used financial incentives to get the bridge rebuilt in slightly more than two months— work that ordinarily would have taken three times that long.18

The Federal Picture After six extensions, the 107th Congress adjourned without completing action on reauthorization of federal highway and transit programs. After the Senate passed its reauthorization bill at $318 billion in February 2004, and the House passed its version at $275 billion in April, a joint conference committee adjourned with a figure of $299 billion on the table as a possible compromise figure. State DOTs and industry will be pushing Congress to take up this measure as one of the first matters considered by the 109th Congress.

Coping with Increasing Transportation Demands Over the past 40 years, the U.S. population grew by 100 million, reaching 295 million as of November 2004.19 During the last decade, the United States grew by 32 million, 14 million of it from immigration. According to Census Bureau forecasts, over the next 40 years the United States will add another 110 million in population, growing to 392 million by 2040.20 In the closing 40 years of the past century, we invested heavily in our transportation infrastructure and created a system that has sustained the world’s stronThe Council of State Governments

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TRANSPORTATION gest economy. The question is what legacy will this generation leave the next. Population growth is only part of the picture of increasing demand. The distances people tally up in their vehicles—a measure dubbed vehicle miles traveled (VMT)—has risen even more steeply than population has in the past 20 years. From 1980 to 2000, the population of the United States rose 24 percent,21 but VMT grew 80 percent.22 During this period the percentage of U.S. households owning cars increased from 86 percent to 92 percent.23 VMT is expected to reach 3.35 trillion miles traveled per year by 2010.24 Another way of looking at it is to compare urban lane-miles constructed between 1980 and 2000 with vehicle miles traveled in the same period. Urban lanemiles built rose by 37 percent, but VMT grew by 80 percent.25 With these statistics before us, the causes of congestion should not be a surprise. Over the past decade, commuters have tended to drive alone more frequently and carpool less often, with the transit share of commuting remaining steady at 5 percent nationwide.26 A result of these developments has been increasing traffic congestion. The Texas Transportation Institute, in the latest version of its annual study of traffic congestion in urban areas, concluded in its 2004 report that U.S. commuters endured 3.5 billion hours of delay and wasted 5.7 billion gallons of fuel (burned while idling) at a cost of $63.2 billion.27 States have responded with a variety of operational improvements; for example, “service patrols” that help motorists experiencing car trouble provide assistance in many states including California, Florida, Illinois, Ohio and Tennessee; real-time information about upcoming road conditions is provided by various means to motorists in Illinois, Michigan, New Mexico and Nebraska; and traffic-signal coordination is increasing across the nation.28 Intelligent transportation systems (ITS) offer still more benefit in maximizing existing highway capacity.

Freight Demand In 2000, the nation’s freight system moved 14 billion tons of domestic freight valued at $11 trillion— 78 percent by truck, 16 percent by rail, 6 percent by barge and 1 percent by air.29 This ability to move goods is crucial to our economy, and domestic and international freight tonnage is expected to increase by 67 percent by 2020.30 And that is excluding concerns that funding will not be adequate to maintain the current freight share held by rail, water and other non-road means. If those costs move over to the roads, the estimated cost to the highway system has 588

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been pegged at $64 billion—conservatively estimated—over two decades.31 Keeping all modes of freight movement firing on all cylinders is crucial to our economy. Growth in international trade is now a key component of our gross domestic product—rising from 13 percent of GDP in 1990 to 26 percent in the year 2000, and projected to rise to 35 percent by the year 2020.32 Significant growth will result in all freight modes—air, truck, rail and barge. As these modes grow, they also change with the needs of the market. In the trucking industry, changes may spur more use of the highway infrastructure. Some of these include shorter hours of service for individual drivers, in the name of safety, which puts more drivers in more trucks on our roads. Other changes include “just-in-time” movement of supplies from warehouse to factory or end-user. Providing the infrastructure to support these levels of freight movement is crucial not only to the overall economy, but to quality of life. There are few consumer items—from food, clothing and building materials to goods purchased on the Internet auction site E-Bay—that do not require freighting by road, rail or water before arriving in the consumer’s hands. Governments are addressing the intermodal challenge presented by freight transport in innovative ways. In California, port and trucking congestion was addressed by construction of the 20-mile, $2.4-billion Alameda Corridor, which created a freight-rail expressway between the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach and destinations east. Opened in 2002, its key component is a below-ground railway 10 miles long that eliminated more than 200 at-grade railroad crossings. The project also halved the time needed to move cargo containers by train between the ports and downtown Los Angeles.33 In New Jersey, state officials in 2003 announced an $80 million public-private freight-rail improvement plan to upgrade access to the ports of Newark and Elizabeth and the Meadowlands area. The plan is expected to help slow the increase of truck traffic on the state’s highways and preserve job growth in the shipping industry.34 And in Chicago, a site of significant freight-rail congestion, railroad industry experts proposed an action plan that will prepare the region for growth and help solidify its place as the nation’s primary rail hub. The public-private plan, dubbed the dubbed the Chicago Region Environmental and Transportation Efficiency (CREATE) Project, would put $1.5 billion to work on a priority list of rail infrastructure improvements and grade-crossing eliminations.35

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Conclusion The task of those of us who believe in a superior transportation system is to convince our neighbors of the signal importance such a system has to our economy and their quality of life. Too few Americans link their ability to live a good life with the movement of freight on the rails and roads, or with the role a highway plays in taking them to work, to medical care or to their child’s sporting events. Transportation has been the economic edge that has kept U.S. goods competitive internationally— but other countries are gaining, and may surpass us unless we continue to improve and enhance our system. The state transportation departments are on the front lines in this competition, and must be involved in nationwide and regional solutions. For our economy, for our freedom of travel and for a continuing high quality of life, the case must be made to support steps in the near future to finance the maintenance and improvement of our surfacetransportation network.

Notes 1 U.S. General Accounting Office, GAO-03-744R, Trends in Federal and State Capital Investment in Highways, (Washington, D.C.: U.S. General Accounting Office, June 2003). http://frwebgate.access.gpo.gov/cgibin/ useftp. cgi?IPaddress=162.140.64.21&filename=d03744r. pdf&directory=/diskb/wais/data/gao. 2 American Public Transportation Association, 2004 Transit Fact Book. (Washington, D.C.: American Public Transportation Association, 2004), Tables 18 and 19. 3 National Association of State Budget Officers, 2003 State Expenditure Report, (Washington, D.C.: National Association of State Budget Officers, October 2004), 66–72. http://www.nasbo.org/Publications/PDFs/2003Expend Report.pdf. 4 American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, TEA-21 Impacts of Delay: $2.1 Billion in Projects Delayed, 90,000 Jobs Lost, (Washington, D.C.: September, 2003), 3–5. http://downloads.transportation. org/TEA21Impacts.pdf. 5 JayEtta Z. Hecker, Steve Cohen, Jerry Fastrup et al, Federal-Aid Highways: Trends, Effect on State Spending, and Options for Future Program Design (Washington, D.C.: General Accountaing Office, 2004). 6 Tony Felts, spokesman for the Indiana Department of Transportation, November 30, 2004, telephone interview. 7 Steven Schwartz, spokesman for the Kansas Department of Transportation, November 30, 2004, telephone interview. 8 American Road & Transportation Builders Association, State Gas Tax Report, July 2004. http://www.artba.org/ economics_research/current_issues/ARTBA%20State% 20Gas%20Tax%20Report%20July04.pdf . 9 Ohio Department of Transportation, “What is Access

Ohio?” http://www.dot.state.oh.us/planning/ACCESS% 20OHIO/WhatIsACCESSOHIO.htm. 10 Washington State Department of Transportation, “Nickel Funding Package,” http://www.wsdot.wa.gov/ projects/nickel/Default.htm. 11 State of Wisconsin, Office of the Governor, “Grow Wisconsin—Gov. Jim Doyle’s Plan to Create Jobs.” (Madison, Wisconsin, September 10, 2003.) http://www.wisgov. state.wi.us/docs/Doyle_economic_package.pdf. 12 Ledyard King, “Tolls Used to Ramp Up Road Funds,” Detroit News on the Web, November 9, 2004. http://www. detnews.com/2004/commuting/0411/10/A11-899.htm. 13 Clint Shields, “Let’s Play Tag—Electronic Tags to Work on All Texas Toll Roads,” Window on State Government Web site, Texas Comptroller of Public Accounts, May 2004. http://www.window.state.tx.us/comptrol/fnotes/ fn0405/lets.html. 14 Steven Ginsberg, “Virginia to Build Beltway Toll Lanes.” Washington Post, August 27, 2004 , A1. 15 Steven Ginsberg, “Toll Lanes Seen as Fix for Lack of Road Funds,” Washington Post, May 5, 2004, B1. 16 Sharon McKone, “Colorado Turns to Tolls to Finance New Roads.” Better Roads for the Government/Contractor Project Team, (October 2004). http:// www.betterroads.com/articles.oct04e.htm. 17 Indiana Department of Transportation, “About Hyperfix,” http://www.in.gov/dot/div/specialprojects/ hyperfix/about/about.htm. 18 American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, Transportation.org Web site. http:// transportation.org/aashto/success.nsf/allpages/31OKBridgeRebuild. 19 U.S. Bureau of the Census, http:www.census.gov (October 19, 2004). 20 U.S. Bureau of the Census, http://www.census.gov/ipc/ www/usinterimproj/natprojtab02a.pdf (October 15, 2004) 21 Anthony Downs, Traffic: Why It’s Getting Worse, What Government Can Do, (Washington, D.C., Brookings Institution, 2003). http://www.brookings.edu/comm/policy briefs/pb128.htm. 22 Ibid. 23 U.S. Bureau of the Census, cited by U.S. Department of Energy, http://www.eere.energy.gov/vehiclesandfuels/ facts/favorites/fcvt_fotw182.shtml. 24 American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, Invest in America, the Bottom Line, (Washington, D.C., American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, 2001), 3. http://bottomline. transportation.org. 25 U.S. Bureau of Transportation Statistics, National Transportation Statistics tables 1–6 and 1–33. http:// products.bts.gov/publications/national_transportation_ statistics/2003/html/table_01_33.html and http://products. bts.gov/publications/national_transportation_statistics/ 2003/html/table_01_06.html 26 U.S. Bureau of the Census, 2000 journey-to-work statistics. http://www.census.gov/population/socdemo/journey/ usmode90.txt. 27 David Schrank and Tim Lomax, “The 2004 Urban Mobility Report,” Texas Transportation Institute. (September, 2004) 1. http://mobility.tamu.edu.

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TRANSPORTATION 28 Optimizing the System—Saving Lives, Saving Time, (Washington, D.C.: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, 2004) 17–45. http:// downloads.transportation.org/OptimizingTheSystem.pdf. 29 Lance R. Grenzeback and Alan Meyers, et al, FreightRail Bottom Line Report, (Washington, D.C.: American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials, 2003) 13. http://freight.transportation.org/doc/FreightRail Report.pdf. 30 Ibid., 45. 31 Ibid., 27. 32 U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis at: http://www.bea.doc.gov. 33 Alameda Corridor Transportation Authority at: http:// www.acta.org/newsroom_factsheet.htm. 34 New Jersey Department of Transportation news release, “Gov. McGreevey Announces $80 Million For Freight Rail Improvements.” (April 28, 2003). http://www.state.nj.us/

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transportation/press/2003releases/042903.htm. 35 Jeromie Winsor, “Railroads, transportation agencies release action plan to ease Chicago rail congestion.” (Chicago, Campaign for Sensible Growth, 6 August 2003). http:/ /www.growingsensibly.org/news/releaseDetail.asp? objectID=1415.

About the Author John Horsley has been executive director of the American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials (AASHTO) since 1999. AASHTO advocates policies and disseminates best practices in transportation. From 1993–1999 he was associate deputy secretary of the U.S. Department of Transportation, and earlier served on the county commission in Kitsap County, Washington. Horsley is a past president of the National Association of Counties.

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9-2

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591

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813,943 269,384 121,052 1,108,360 252,201 2,408,051 -243,590 2,087,583 43,498 68,880 692,936 1,783,219 511,813 45,362 984,409 1,156,371 1,036,796 105,555 46,529 1,217,871 57,552 325,522 661,000 440,789 231,291 1,219,577 1,305,174 1,103,023 644,603 721,913 496,131 632,212 972,506 548,337 412,731 1,045,728 3,154,647 1,192,845 252,324 898,364

Midwestern Region Illinois ................................ Indiana ............................... Iowa .................................... Kansas ................................ Michigan ............................ Minnesota .......................... Nebraska ............................ North Dakota ..................... Ohio .................................... South Dakota ..................... Wisconsin ........................... Regional average ...............

Southern Region Alabama ............................. Arkansas ............................. Florida ................................ Georgia ............................... Kentucky ............................ Louisiana ............................ Maryland ............................ Mississippi ......................... Missouri ............................. North Carolina ................... Oklahoma ........................... South Carolina ................... Tennessee ........................... Texas .................................. Virginia .............................. West Virginia ..................... Regional average ...............

See footnotes at end of table.

$39,280,834

United States ....................

Balance beginning of year (a)

Eastern Region Connecticut ........................ Delaware ............................ Maine ................................. Massachusetts .................... New Hampshire ................. New Jersey ......................... New York ........................... Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... Vermont .............................. Regional average ...............

State or other jurisdiction

761,175 555,102 2,942,431 676,337 1,054,649 737,833 821,210 495,649 899,193 1,359,861 656,332 451,992 948,346 3,442,933 1,227,310 589,025 1,242,842

2,511,681 1,379,619 753,503 580,713 1,776,862 1,117,068 357,156 154,065 2,105,720 161,273 1,118,729 1,092,399

447,112 373,434 313,681 1,199,477 298,657 1,201,681 2,523,899 2,251,826 93,512 187,395 889,067

$48,734,743

Highway-user revenues

62,657 28,732 193,339 203,744 192,527 101,176 0 0 19,705 0 10,518 0 23,653 33,510 101,978 14,995 61,008

54,048 2,669 60,077 11,206 165,999 16,128 33,614 11,875 39,033 351 0 35,909

107,735 104,085 2,541 636,957 10,253 0 304,687 527,101 0 2,041 169,450

$3,399,724

5,710 1,339 95,821 217,296 0 36,012 113,552 44,815 217,095 383,485 53,649 0 39,038 30,942 411,991 0 95,579

0 0 245,731 89,854 0 184,957 135,315 5,711 0 55,793 0 65,215

65,529 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3,454 6,898

$3,382,232

Other Appropriations from state general funds (c) imposts

4,104 26,705 113,245 90,067 56,585 25,334 33,010 12,701 26,562 81,721 39,492 26,484 42,168 171,707 77,307 9,186 53,722

31,665 9,876 7,441 44,915 67,227 74,976 27,981 382 85,232 22,677 31,913 36,753

89,661 30,154 16,952 192,635 9,802 133,665 88,674 316,715 17,297 7,808 90,336

$2,748,979

Miscellaneous

200,000 225,728 651,134 0 0 278,734 229,342 0 0 0 7,427 6,830 0 239,355 686,588 1,416 198,606

429,160 445,000 0 33,950 0 28,477 0 0 291,168 0 213,182 130,994

264,432 340,883 51,000 916,474 3,960 1,104,075 1,492,319 21,018 30,000 118 422,428

$9,525,997

0 0 1,230,135 0 0 73,510 92,393 0 0 0 92,170 39,675 0 241,750 420,808 61,280 217,616

172,331 0 0 495,500 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 60,712

381,575 221,990 0 0 4,895 2,596,750 762,749 426,780 21,211 1,538 441,749

$7,562,991

Refunding issues

Bond proceeds Original issues

Table 9.2 STATE REVENUES USED FOR HIGHWAYS, BY REGION: 2003 (In thousands of dollars)

587,033 437,083 1,695,189 792,804 513,357 483,710 496,292 411,567 732,290 791,500 394,602 426,764 538,661 2,494,149 656,374 407,254 797,563

836,519 597,252 343,791 330,931 592,450 330,300 210,107 198,301 888,290 198,098 563,295 462,667

407,569 110,788 171,126 508,637 143,228 734,476 1,316,564 1,361,855 137,563 108,163 499,997

$28,383,735

FHA

8,849 8,323 15,482 11,767 10,450 7,875 9,264 6,470 8,067 13,078 5,010 20,535 11,403 30,966 19,537 15,787 12,911

14,406 18,112 5,893 3,676 13,270 7,188 1,282 3,959 14,170 2,583 9,775 8,574

9,471 456 1,944 9,084 825 6,819 20,903 33,304 3,133 2,306 8,825

$796,715

Other Agencies

50,000 1,970 149,871 0 0 0 0 13,707 13,162 10,424 8,309 10,544 31,675 322,273 39,685 0 50,093

45,217 0 0 20,683 31,237 22,218 58,753 12,501 57,507 14,024 87,136 31,752

5,632 0 0 0 8,879 0 17,511 32,867 0 2,465 6,735

$1,658,684

Local governments

Payments from other governments Federal Funds

1,679,528 1,284,982 7,086,647 1,992,015 1,827,568 1,744,184 1,795,063 984,909 1,916,074 2,640,069 1,267,509 982,824 1,634,944 7,007,585 3,641,578 1,098,943 2,729,941

4,095,027 2,452,528 1,416,436 1,611,428 2,647,045 1,781,312 824,208 386,794 3,481,120 454,799 2,024,030 1,924,975

1,778,716 1,181,790 557,244 3,463,264 480,499 5,777,466 6,527,306 4,971,466 302,716 315,288 2,535,576

$106,193,800

Total receipts

HIGHWAYS

591


592

9-2

592

443,707

304,020 61,146

Dist. of Columbia .............. 25,837

23,891

83,244 43,533 5,411 28,740 14,415 0 0 4,213 0 37,215 69,708 10,474 0 22,843

36,647

53,638

0 579,148 264,838 1,010 2,079 0 0 0 2,317 9,745 38,031 27 11,301 69,884

Other Appropriations from state general funds (c) imposts

941

26,719

23,456 1,995 283,379 131,963 15,691 0 2,807 6,977 16,513 15,246 40,484 59,490 6,011 46,462

Miscellaneous

Source: U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, Highway Statistics, 2003, November 2004. Note: Detail may not add to totals due to rounding. This table was compiled from reports of state authorities. Key: (a) Any differences between beginning balances and the closing balances on last year’s information are the result of accounting adjustments, inclusion of funds not previously reported, etc. (b) Amounts shown represent only those highway user revenues that were expended on state or local roads. (c) Amounts shown represent gross general fund appropriations for highways reduced by the amount of highway-user revenues placed in the State General Fund.

120,813

73,306 850,797 4,039,730 1,166,982 147,479 329,330 247,708 585,087 368,435 643,370 405,681 1,096,840 132,744 775,961

Highway-user revenues

0 736,846 6,403,743 897,530 418,363 206,268 101,374 237,954 408,030 342,594 442,817 417,312 32,665 818,884

Balance beginning of year (a)

Western Region Alaska ................................ Arizona ............................... California ........................... Colorado ............................. Hawaii ................................ Idaho .................................. Montana ............................. Nevada ............................... New Mexico ....................... Oregon ................................ Utah .................................... Washington ........................ Wyoming ............................ Regional average ............... Regional average ............... without California .............

State or other jurisdiction

13,971

110,021

113,866 349,172 0 105,859 0 0 0 199,483 16,699 0 161,597 373,580 0 101,558

Original issues

9,561

18,033

0 103,045 0 0 44,940 0 0 0 0 0 0 68,405 0 16,645

Refunding issues

Bond proceeds

STATE REVENUES USED FOR HIGHWAYS, BY REGION: 2003 (In thousands of dollars)—Continued

153,396

316,757

398,917 447,986 2,481,325 427,569 135,085 207,684 307,434 203,431 269,258 366,640 223,395 587,235 226,448 483,262

FHA

1,933

27,776

4,257 11,127 76,051 15,973 259 16,257 13,852 963 30,671 111,578 20,721 30,266 77,385 31,489

Other Agencies

0

6,431

0 41,967 513,258 2,170 0 2,413 625 0 0 0 0 25,073 4,928 45,418

Local governments

Payments from other governments Federal Funds

363,099

1,087,650

697,046 2,428,770 7,663,992 1,880,266 359,948 555,684 572,426 1,000,154 703,893 1,183,794 959,617 2,251,390 458,817 1,593,523

Total receipts

HIGHWAYS

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9-3

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47,666 7,753 26,172 81,299 18,491 87,633 163,828 173,369 10,398 15,639 63,225 208,122 120,463 63,533 60,363 137,949 86,279 41,152 26,833 193,760 31,841 77,407 95,246 90,138 63,041 180,339 174,984 92,837 77,042 80,288 58,674 124,585 122,458 85,188 80,662 118,259 360,453 129,956 40,878 117,486

Eastern Region Connecticut ....................... Delaware ........................... Maine ................................ Massachusetts ................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................ New York .......................... Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... Vermont ............................. Regional average ..............

Midwestern Region Illinois ............................... Indiana .............................. Iowa ................................... Kansas ............................... Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Nebraska ........................... North Dakota .................... Ohio ................................... South Dakota .................... Wisconsin .......................... Regional average ..............

Southern Region Alabama ............................ Arkansas ............................ Florida ............................... Georgia .............................. Kentucky ........................... Louisiana ........................... Maryland ........................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................ North Carolina .................. Oklahoma .......................... South Carolina .................. Tennessee .......................... Texas ................................. Virginia ............................. West Virginia .................... Regional average ..............

See footnotes at end of table.

$4,623,245

Interstate maintenance

United States Total .........

State or other jurisdiction

102,254 77,596 256,640 169,772 103,276 75,566 88,116 81,598 129,784 146,303 106,299 81,370 121,609 456,184 127,199 41,793 135,335

183,295 126,487 92,215 83,602 167,442 104,887 72,017 75,478 178,737 62,878 124,565 115,600

44,141 43,249 30,636 81,467 33,596 132,594 190,396 190,915 40,822 36,015 82,383

$5,646,868

National highway system

131,709 90,170 305,847 232,403 112,549 103,017 108,096 93,153 166,105 182,797 131,582 113,715 146,120 545,406 170,635 50,665 167,748

245,517 155,990 96,612 106,243 231,937 134,145 67,306 40,679 230,364 44,819 138,115 135,612

61,695 32,811 36,097 115,571 33,509 151,628 254,640 237,435 32,951 33,230 98,957

$6,612,124

Surface transportation program

77,780 46,637 65,166 61,997 64,030 101,617 73,558 51,596 133,738 98,474 94,797 54,805 66,485 153,547 81,596 59,270 80,318

142,326 41,893 63,612 59,404 117,596 30,502 30,969 9,766 121,892 14,040 33,294 60,481

76,807 12,943 28,913 146,159 22,341 198,083 396,669 402,417 49,759 25,478 135,957

$3,970,589

Bridge program

8,106 7,904 40,416 32,939 9,728 7,891 48,435 7,991 20,721 17,023 8,247 7,871 14,224 96,045 32,151 7,981 22,980

84,029 15,085 8,249 8,261 34,034 17,140 8,261 7,969 52,020 7,957 19,425 23,857

32,211 8,005 8,201 62,270 8,175 94,503 149,873 84,589 9,155 8,107 46,509

$1,618,091

Congestion mitigation and air quality improvement

56,582 0 0 22,339 52,092 0 8,953 6,255 0 33,096 0 2,692 62,438 0 13,071 77,458 20,936

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 25,241 0 0 2,295

0 0 0 0 0 0 12,174 140,113 0 0 15,229

$512,506

Appalachian development highway system

1,128 934 1,932 1,488 920 1,176 820 1,151 1,162 1,389 1,071 879 1,082 2,534 1,031 835 1,221

1,465 959 997 992 1,781 1,372 834 716 1,367 724 1,318 1,139

675 611 878 937 762 966 1,377 1,403 609 704 892

$57,657

Recreation trails

2,300 1,193 15,962 5,937 1,857 3,005 5,096 1,193 3,662 4,457 1,758 2,220 3,513 17,533 5,585 1,193 4,779

11,539 4,042 1,321 1,431 7,795 3,213 1,193 1,193 8,664 1,193 3,368 4,087

3,375 1,193 1,193 6,677 1,193 9,188 18,373 9,730 1,193 1,193 5,331

$238,584

Metropolitan planning

Table 9.3 APPORTIONMENT OF FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAY FUNDS BY REGION: FISCAL YEAR 2004 (In thousands of dollars)

134,649 94,920 608,741 378,331 98,389 97,546 95,174 63,834 112,539 254,630 49,936 160,233 131,744 803,010 201,370 35,469 207,532

139,812 219,994 39,116 35,568 241,430 58,742 24,980 38,565 214,907 47,630 196,184 114,266

169,814 31,022 29,565 73,260 34,024 138,366 325,707 214,245 38,538 20,952 107,549

$7,252,725

Minimum guarantee

41,705 38,983 151,046 121,179 18,070 47,243 48,538 30,536 60,755 57,187 50,231 48,459 64,448 308,890 104,421 45,407 77,319

62,341 67,280 17,647 17,775 68,478 41,828 1,000 7,769 110,305 16,890 41,420 41,158

47,878 3,489 6,176 26,702 12,552 83,455 133,314 136,617 6,568 4,509 46,126

$2,744,973

Total (a)

646,352 421,378 1,626,091 1,201,369 553,748 514,102 557,073 395,981 753,052 917,813 529,111 552,907 729,925 2,743,602 867,016 360,948 835,654

1,078,445 752,191 383,302 373,640 1,008,443 478,108 247,712 208,967 1,137,257 227,972 635,096 593,739

484,262 141,076 167,830 594,342 164,641 896,417 1,646,351 1,590,833 189,993 145,827 602,157

$33,277,362

Revenue aligned budget authority

TRANSPORTATION

593


594

9-3

594

67,149

53,983 2,857 0 0 0 0 0

Dist. of Columbia ............. American Samoa .............. Guam ................................. No. Mariana Islands ......... Puerto Rico (b) ................. U.S. Virgin Islands ........... 34,656 3,015 9,592 3,015 0 12,062

63,842

30,123 113,571 646,100 100,853 33,792 40,470 39,511 45,145 56,533 87,190 55,829 131,087 31,999 108,631

Surface transportation program

24,457 0 0 0 0 0

26,377

10,622 11,412 319,659 24,955 22,475 15,207 13,292 9,907 12,271 49,970 27,137 109,705 9,567 48,937

Bridge program

8,455 0 0 0 0 0

13,495

7,349 33,173 352,511 20,263 8,244 8,023 7,590 13,683 7,881 11,464 10,822 25,635 7,807 39,753

Congestion mitigation and air quality improvement

Source: U.S. Department of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration, Highway Statistics, 2003 (Novemer 2004). Note: Apportioned pursuant to the Transportation Efficiency Act of 1998 (TEA-21) as amended by the TEA21 Restoration Act. Does not include funds from the Mass Transit Account of the Highway Trust Fund. (a) Does not include funds from the following programs: emergency relief, Federal lands highway programs, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico highway programs,high priority projects, Woodrow Wilson Bridge, National Byways, construction of ferry boats and ferry terminal facilities, and intelligent vehicle-system,among others. These funds are allocated from the Highway Trust Fund. (b) Under several extensions of TEA-21, Puerto Rico received a stand alone authorization of $72,974,214 for FY 2004.

51,013 0 0 0 0 0

26,820 100,206 529,273 95,162 44,164 47,121 64,508 45,533 70,841 80,058 47,390 102,415 81,573 102,697

21,293 92,543 412,855 73,691 8,363 35,315 46,785 39,854 63,877 61,688 65,224 91,963 47,205 81,859

Interstate maintenance

Western Region Alaska ............................... Arizona .............................. California .......................... Colorado ............................ Hawaii ............................... Idaho ................................. Montana ............................ Nevada .............................. New Mexico ...................... Oregon ............................... Utah ................................... Washington ....................... Wyoming ........................... Regional average .............. Regional average without California ............

State or other jurisdiction

National highway system

0 0 0 0 0 0

0

0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0

Appalachian development highway system

594 0 0 0 0 0

1,005

789 1,245 4,024 1,437 640 958 959 783 1,002 990 990 1,373 891 1,237

Recreation trails

1,193 0 0 0 0 0

2,258

1,193 4,631 35,573 3,807 1,193 1,193 1,193 1,986 1,193 2,342 2,071 5,100 1,193 4,821

Metropolitan planning

1,231 0 0 0 0 0

87,494

233,076 181,799 548,626 80,514 37,679 70,811 119,029 65,048 75,955 59,574 27,795 70,241 28,410 122,966

Minimum guarantee

APPORTIONMENT OF FEDERAL-AID HIGHWAY FUNDS BY REGION: FISCAL YEAR 2004 (In thousands of dollars)—Continued

1,695 0 0 0 0 0

28,335

48,690 56,372 252,160 43,290 8,537 27,020 23,755 9,188 25,636 35,224 16,806 32,492 13,014 45,553

Revenue aligned budget authority

126,152 3,015 9,592 3,015 0 12,062

343,938

379,954 594,953 3,100,780 443,973 165,088 246,117 316,623 231,129 315,188 388,500 254,063 570,011 221,658 556,003

Total (a)

TRANSPORTATION

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE

Trends in Probation and Parole in the States By William D. Burrell Probation and parole play an essential and critical role in the administration of both criminal and juvenile justice. They supervise the vast majority of offenders, and their caseloads continue to grow. In response to the pressures of increased workload, static or declining budgets, and limited public and political support, six strategic trends have emerged. These trends characterize the efforts of probation and parole to meet their mandates and improve their effectiveness. Introduction Probation and parole are integral to criminal and juvenile justice in the states. They provide a wide variety of services that are critical to the effective and efficient operation of almost every aspect of the justice system, ranging from law enforcement to sentencing to the release of offenders from confinement into the community. While these community corrections agencies conduct investigations to support judicial and parole decision-making, operate residential and secure custodial facilities and provide free labor to local organizations through community service programs, probation and parole are best known for their role in the supervision of offenders in the community. This community supervision function is responsible for the bulk of the correctional population in the United States. At the end of 2003, some 4.8 million adults were on probation and parole, compared with approximately 2.1 million adults in jail or prison. Seventy percent of the adult correctional population is under the jurisdiction of probation and parole officers.1 Juvenile court statistics reveal that probation is imposed in 62 percent of adjudicated delinquency cases and that some 675,000 juveniles are under probation supervision.2 It is challenging to try to describe or discuss probation and parole in this country, not only because of the scope and scale of its operations, but also because of its structure and organization. The phrases “probation and parole,” or “community corrections” are used routinely and would imply a single or unified system. Nothing could be farther from the truth. Probation and parole agencies are a fragmented, heterogeneous collection of organizations found at the federal, state, county and municipal levels, housed in the judicial and executive branches. There are even some private companies and non-profit organizations providing probation services. There are hundreds of departments and offices and thousands of staff committed to the mission of community corrections. In addition, probation and parole agencies are part of a large, complex and interdependent array of gov-

ernmental, non-profit and private agencies and organizations that comprise the criminal and juvenile justice systems. Almost no aspect of the work of probation and parole can be considered in isolation, as they are affected by and have an impact on many other agencies. Despite the challenge of this organizational diversity, it is possible to identify trends that are affecting probation and parole in the states. As with any endeavor, not every jurisdiction is affected or involved equally. The trends will be discussed in two major areas. The first involves trends in the overall operating environment of probation and parole. The second are trends that can best be described as the strategic responses of probation and parole as they strive to accomplish their mission.

Environmental Trends The environmental factors that have an impact on probation and parole include organizational structure, workload, resources and funding and legislative/political initiatives and support. The organizational structure of probation and parole is stable. Unlike the period of the late 1970s and early 1980s when parole came under attack and was abolished in 16 states,3 no large scale efforts are underway in terms of significantly altering the organizational structure of these community-based correctional agencies. The workload of probation and parole continues to grow. Since 1995, the number of adults on probation and parole has increased 29 percent, compared with 2.9 percent for prisons and 4 percent for jails. The adult probation population has grown steadily since 1990. The projection for adult probation populations is for continued slow but steady growth.4 The parole population has shown less annual growth over the past decade, but that is beginning to increase. The huge cohort of offenders incarcerated under the “get tough” sentencing laws passed in the 1980s is now approaching their release dates in large numbers. While the release of many of those inmates will be mandatory (not on parole), many will still be The Council of State Governments

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE subject to post-release supervision of some type.5 Overall, both probation and parole will continue to see modest growth for the foreseeable future. Because of the complex organizational structure of these services, the resource and funding aspects of probation and parole are complex. The overall state of the economy contributes to the less than rosy picture as all levels of government are experiencing fiscal stress to some degree and money is generally tight. Probation and parole are not popular, high visibility programs with strong political support. Despite the fact that they handle the vast majority of the offender population, probation and parole receive less than 10 percent of the correctional funding from state and local governments.6 Probation and parole supervision also lack the constitutional mandates and high public expectations that drive more adequate and stable funding, such as that provided for prisons and public schools. The political/legislative arena is difficult to characterize in brief. The cost of incarceration is an immense burden on the states, which in turn is forcing changes in release practices. Many legislatures and governors are taking a hard look at alternatives, including sentencing reforms. Almost any conceivable response to the incarceration “problem” will lead to greater reliance on probation and parole. Depending on how extensive the changes are in sentencing or release practices, the impact on probation and parole caseloads case loads and resources could be substantial. It is not just the legislatures and governors who are looking at this issue. In Arizona and California, voter referenda7 on the handling of first time drug offenders resulted in significant changes in policy and increased referrals to probation. In California, 50,335 offenders agreed to participate in the alternative to incarceration program from July 1, 2002 to June 30, 2003. Ninety percent of those were sentenced to probation or were already on probation. The remaining 10 percent were parolees.8 It is clear that sentencing reform to relieve the pressure of incarceration will have a substantial impact on probation and parole caseloads. While the overall environment of probation and parole is stable, this should not be taken as a positive indicator. Workloads are generally too large and they are growing. Budgets are generally inadequate and getting tighter. The uncertain prospect of sentencing reform looms large over a system with little capacity to absorb additional workload without additional resources.

Strategic Trends The pressure from the external environment obvi596

00L-Burrell

ously only tells one part of the story. The responses of the probation and parole agencies to these pressures (and others) comprise the strategic trends in probation and parole. These are efforts designed to both cope with a large and often unmanageable workload and to improve the quality and effectiveness of services. The trends are strategic in that they are not case-based or a response to the challenges of one program, but redefine the missions and organizational culture of probation and parole. The six strategic trends are: collaboration and partnerships, resultsdriven management, re-emergence of rehabilitation, specialization, technology and community justice. 1. Collaboration and Partnerships. Probation and parole agencies are increasingly recognizing that they can not do it alone. They need the expertise and assistance of others. This is a trend that is emerging throughout all levels of government.9 Ironically, line officers have been collaborating for years—with the police officers, drug counselors, teachers, psychologists, employment specialists and others—who were also involved with their clients. The critical difference today is that these partnerships are forged at a higher level and are more formal. They involve the sharing of important organizational commodities— staff time and resources, information, decision-making authority and political power. Important and influential decision-makers are involved on a regular basis in the operation of these collaborative programs. The best example of these formal partnerships is the drug court and other specialty “treatment courts.” Other examples of partnerships include school-based probation, police/probation partnerships, the offender reentry initiative, and collaborative case management and supervision for specific offender groups such as sex offenders, the mentally ill, DUI offenders and domestic violence offenders. Implications—Collaborations and partnerships would seem to be an easy and smart thing to do. They do, however require some changes for those participating. Role’s and responsibilities need to be discussed and revised to accommodate the new approach. The sharing of resources and decision-making authority can be a difficult concept for traditional bureaucrats. In some instances, statutory or rule changes may be necessary to allow information sharing, particularly with juvenile offenders. 2. Results-Driven Management. The mandate to demonstrate results is part of a larger national and international movement at all levels of government. It is another trend that is transforming government,10

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE and probation and parole are no exception. Also known more generically as performance measurement, results-driven management requires that managers and their organizations be able to demonstrate both what they are doing (compliance and accountability) and what they are producing (outcomes or results). It is no longer good enough to be busy with large caseloads and hardworking staff. Agencies need to be productive, delivering the services as expected or required, and producing the results that matter, results that their constituents want. It is not enough to measure against internally set standards and goals —probation and parole must begin to address how they produce “public value.” Results-driven management requires a substantial investment of agency time and resources. The agency mission, goals and measures must be articulated and agreed upon. Resources, program rules and procedures must be aligned with the mission and goals. Managers and staff must engage in a regular examination and discussion of outcomes and must make those reports available to those outside the agency, who can use this outcome information in determining resource allocations. Implications—Done well, results-driven management will produce more and better information about the agency’s performance, both good and bad. This information will produce pressure for support of good programs and pressure to fix poor performers. Ultimately, the pressure could demand the elimination of poor performing programs. Information on agency and program performance will inform the budget process and make it more complex at the same time. 3. The Re-emergence of Rehabilitation. Probation and parole were established in this country in the middle of the 19th century. Both were founded on the principle that offenders could change and that the correctional system, and probation and parole officers in particular, had a central role in helping the offender change. In the 1970s, rehabilitation and correctional treatment were attacked as ineffective, and ultimately abandoned. The driving forces behind the attack were largely political (the “get tough on crime” movement), although a well-timed academic study was distorted to undermine the effectiveness of correctional treatment.11 By the start of the 1980s, states were well on their way to erasing all traces of rehabilitation from corrections, including probation and parole. At the same time, a small group of Canadian researchers was assembling a body of research that suggested that correctional rehabilitation was indeed

effective, if done well. Over the decade of the 1980s and into the 1990s, this research continued to grow and provide increasing support for well designed treatment. The body of research became known as the “what works” literature. Increasingly, probation and parole agencies are becoming aware of this work and are adopting it. The research is an important foundation for the effort to return to rehabilitation, but the bridge must be made to practical application if its full potential is to be reached. Two other developments have embraced the idea that correctional treatment works, and they are having a profound impact, having bridged the gap between theory and practice. In 1989, the first drug court was established in Miami. Judge Stanley Goldstein and his colleagues developed the first drug court out of frustration for the revolving door that seemed to characterize his courtroom when dealing with drug offenders. The drug court is based on rehabilitation of the drug offender, not just incarceration. The success of the drug court model is widely known and the concept as spread across the country with great speed.12 It was suddenly acceptable to talk openly about treatment and rehabilitation. The second development is the prisoner reentry initiative, begun in the late 1990s. Re-entry is based on the recognition that hundreds of thousands of inmates who were incarcerated during the “get tough” era from 1980 on will soon be released from prison. What is noteworthy is that these inmates did not have the benefit of the correctional programs and treatment that formerly characterized a stay in prison. At best, these inmates will be no better off than when they went in, and more likely will pose a greater risk of re-offending as the result of their time inside the prison.13 The re-entry model views the period of incarceration as time when inmates should be participating in programs and treatment to better prepare them to return to the community. The incarceration should be followed by a graduated release back into the community, followed by supervision in the community by a parole officer, who is charged with assisting the offender with the transition to freedom. The re-entry concept embraces the rehabilitative model throughout all three phases. Implications—Embracing the rehabilitative model requires a significant role redefinition and organizational change for probation and parole. An entire generation of staff has grown up in the field without exposure to treatment and rehabilitation. One of the key findings of the ‘what works’ research is that treatment cannot be done in a slip-shod manner and be effective. The large caseloads that currently epitomize The Council of State Governments

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE probation and parole will significantly hinder the ability to officers to follow the principles of effective treatment. Additional resources or a realignment of resources will be necessary. Changing the mission of community corrections will also have political implications, for there are still many who believe strongly that incarceration is the most effective way to deal with criminals. 4. Specialization. As the problems facing society have grown more complex and challenging, so have the offenders who are sentenced to probation or released to parole. Today, the average agency caseload includes adult and juvenile offenders with alcohol and drug addictions, the mentally ill, sex offenders, drunk drivers, gang members, violent offenders and offenders with combinations of all of the above. As the number of these “special needs” offenders grew, probation and parole agencies began to specialize their services. In the beginning, this meant putting all of the like offenders in one caseload. Staff assigned to those caseloads then began to develop experience and gained specialized expertise through training. As the knowledge about these cases grew, the nature and type of supervision changed. Caseloads were limited in size, and supervision was targeted to the special needs of the population. Officers began to consult with specialists and treatment providers from other agencies, providing more comprehensive services. Lastly, probation and parole agencies began to enter into formal partnerships with other agencies to provide more comprehensive supervision for these offenders. Today it is commonplace to see a full array of specialized caseloads and even units in all but the smallest of probation and parole departments. This development is mirrored in the professional literature, which reflects an increased depth and sophistication about effective supervision and treatment strategies and techniques. Implications—Specialization almost always requires additional resources for smaller caseloads, specialized training, purchase of treatment services and perhaps even hiring of specialists to provide services directly, if the numbers warrant. This approach poses particular problems for small departments, which have neither the number of cases to support specialization nor sufficient numbers of staff to specialize. Yet these departments still have the problematic offenders in their caseloads. 5. Technology. America’s pursuit of the better mousetrap has penetrated probation and parole. The private sector is offering products that use a variety 598

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of electronic and chemical technologies to help monitor behavior and detect violations. Electronic monitoring is probably the best known, and includes global positioning satellite systems, the well-known ankle bracelet and voice verification systems. Vendors offer a full array of drug testing products that use urine, saliva and hair to detect drug use. The handheld breathalyzer can detect alcohol use, and that same technology has been incorporated into the ignition interlock, which prevents an intoxicated person from starting a vehicle. One product now on the market tests pupil response to determine if the subject is currently under the influence of drugs. With sex offenders, software is available that can monitor the offender’s computer use and report to the probation or parole officer what Internet sites the offender has visited. The polygraph is used frequently to monitor the truthfulness of sex offenders. Advances in computer software and improved interfaces between systems make it much easier for agencies to share information across jurisdictional and state lines. Implications—As technology advances and becomes less expensive, it becomes more attractive and affordable to probation and parole. One big challenge that must be considered is how the system will respond to the increased ability to detect illegal behavior. With extra “eyes and ears” watching the offenders, officers will be confronted with additional violations. How will the system handle these cases? Are there effective strategies that can be used? Failure to respond effectively will undermine the effectiveness of the technology. Technology almost always costs money. Some agencies pass the cost on the offender, but for some technologies (computer interfaces) and some offenders (those who are indigent), that is not possible. Any contract with a vendor raises concerns about the bidding and contracting process. There may be statutory and regulatory changes required allowing the use of certain technologies. Monitoring technologies raise a critical staffing issue. Notifications about violations can come from electronic monitoring systems at any hour of the day or night. Who will respond, or will there even be a response at 4:00AM? Real time monitoring does not fit into a traditional work schedule. 6. Community Justice. Dissatisfaction with the traditional justice system and its almost exclusive focus on the offender has generated a new paradigm called community justice. Under this approach, the justice system expands its focus beyond just finding and sanctioning the offender. The victim of the crime

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE and the community itself are brought in to participate, and the process of justice expands from just sanctioning the offender to include restoring the victim and the community. The process also includes community-based problem-solving to prevent future crime. The justice system and the community join together to take a proactive, preventive and holistic approach to crime prevention. A community justice system provides a role for the victim and dispositions of cases are likely to feature restitution and community service. It also provides a role for the community, and that can include advisory boards or something similar to Vermont’s reparative boards, where citizens play a role in determining the disposition of the case.14 Implication—Adoption of a community justice model has profound implications for the justice system. It involves a fundamental re-tooling of the mission and roles of all components of the system, significant training requirements, partnerships with the community, and may require statutory changes to support its implementation.

Conclusion The trends discussed above illustrate not only the forces that are affecting probation and parole, but also how the field is responding in an effort to accomplish its mission and improve its effectiveness. This is a critical point, because probation and parole play a critical role in achieving the fundamental purpose of the justice systems—preventing crime and ensuring the safety of citizens and the community. No matter whether the focus is probation or parole, adult or juvenile, county or state, the effectiveness of these agencies has implications throughout the justice system, the community and society as a whole. Several examples illustrate the impact of probation and parole: 1. Violations of probation or parole—offenders who violate the conditions of their supervision can be revoked and sentenced to jail or prison. A less effective program of supervision can result in more revocations and people sent to jail or prison, exacerbating the crowding in the correctional institutions. 2. Confidence of judges and paroling authorities —if the key decision-makers have confidence in the supervision provided, they will be more likely to sentence to probation or release to parole. This can reduce jail and prison crowding. 3. Demand for other justice services—if probation and parole are not effective in supervising and controlling their caseloads, the offenders will commit additional crimes and increase the demand on

police, prosecution, defense, courts and corrections. 4. Smooth functioning of the justice system – as noted at the outset, probation in particular and parole play a role in almost all aspects of the justice system. An effective and efficient system is reliant on probation and parole to carry out their role and work well with their partners. 5. Public confidence and expectations—the effectiveness of probation and parole can generate public confidence and garner political support if they meet the expectations of the citizens. 6. Community safety—probably the most important aspect of the effectiveness of probation and parole is that it can have a significant impact on public safety when it is done well. All of the trends—environmental and strategic— clearly point to a continuing central role for probation in the criminal and juvenile justice systems. The consequences of these efforts are also clear. Improved performance of probation and parole will lead to less crime and increased safety. Investment in increased capacity and capability to deliver effective probation and parole services will provide a valuable return in justice and safety for the community.

Notes 1 Lauren E. Glaze and Seri Pella, Probation and Parole in the United States, 2003, (Washington, D.C.: Bureau of Justice Statistics, July 2004). 2 Charles Puzzanchera, et al, Juvenile Court Statistics 1999, (Pittsburgh, PA: National Center for Juvenile Justice. July 2003), 38. 3 Joan Petersilia, When Prisoners Come Home: Parole and Prisoners Reentry, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003), 65. 4 Allen J. Beck, “Trends in Community Corrections,” (Presentation to the Community Corrections Research Network, Washington, DC. October 19, 2004). 5 Ibid. 6 Joan Petersilia, “A Crime Control Rationale for Reinvesting in Community Corrections,” Prison Journal 74, no. 3 (1995): 479-96. 7 Proposition 200 in Arizona and Proposition 36 in California. 8 Douglas Longshore, et al, Evaluation of the Substance Abuse and Crime Prevention Act: 2003 Report, (Los Angeles: UCLA Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, September 2004.) 9 Mark A. Abramson, Jonathan D. Breul and John M. Kamensky, “Four Trends Transforming Government,” The Business of Government, (Summer 2003): 17-18. 10 Ibid., 12-13. 11 Robert Martinson, “What Works? Questions and Answers About Prison Reform,” The Public Interest, (Spring 1974): 22-54. 12 James L. Nolan, Jr., Reinventing Justice: The American Drug Court Movement, (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001).

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE 13 Joan Petersilia, When Prisoners Come Home: Parole and Prisoners Reentry, (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003). 14 David R. Karp, “Does Community Justice Work?” Perspectives 27, no. 1 (Winter 2003): 32-7

References Abramson, Mark A., Jonathan D. Breul and John M. Kamensky. “Four Trends Transforming Government.” The Business of Government (Summer 2003): 17-18. Andrews, Don and James Bonta. The Psychology of Criminal Conduct, 3rd. ed. Cincinnati: Anderson Publishing, 2004 Bogue, Brad, et al. Implementing Evidence-Based Principles in Community Corrections: Collaboration for Systemic Change in the Criminal Justice System. Washington, DC: National Institute of Corrections, 2004. Boone, Harry and Betsy Fulton. Results-Driven Management. Lexington, KY: American Probation and Parole Association, 1995. Clear, Todd R. and David Karp. The Community Justice Ideal: Preventing Crime and Achieving Justice. Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 1999. Crowe, Ann. Intervening in Family Violence: A Resource Manual for Community Corrections Professionals. Lexington, KY: American Probation and Parole Association, 1995. Crowe, Ann. Offender Supervision with Electronic Technology: A User’s Guide. Lexington, KY: American Probation and Parole Association, 2002. The Council of State Governments. Criminal Justice / Mental Health Consensus Project. New York: The Council of State Governments, June 2002. English, Kim, Suzanne Pullen and Linda Jones, eds. Managing Adult Sex Offenders: A Containment Approach.

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Lexington, KY: American Probation and Parole Association, 1996. Fulton, Betsy. Restoring Hope Through Community Partnerships: The Real Deal in Crime Control. Lexington, KY: American Probation and Parole Association, 1996. Goldsmith, Stephen and William D. Egggers. Governing by Network: The New Shape of the Public Sector. Washington, DC: The Brookings Institution, 2004. Moore, Mark H. Creating Public Value. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1995. National Institute of Corrections. Topics in Community Corrections: Collaboration – An Essential Strategy. Washington, DC, 2001. Nolan, James L., Jr. Reinventing Justice: The American Drug Court Movement. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001. Petersilia, Joan. When Prisoners Come Home: Parole and Prisoners Reentry. New York: Oxford University Press, 2003. Reinventing Probation Council. Transforming Probation Through Leadership: The “Broken Windows” Model. New York: The Manhattan Institute, 2000. Robertson, Robyn D. and Herbert M. Simpson. DWI System Improvements: Stopping the Revolving Door, Ottawa, Canada, 2003.

About the Author William D. Burrell is associate professor in the Department of Criminal Justice of Temple University in Philadelphia. In 2003, he retired as chief of probation services for the New Jersey state court system. He is chairman of the editorial committee for Perspectives, the journal of the American Probation and Parole Association, and writes a bimonthly column on management issues for Community Corrections Report.

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE/CORRECTIONS

Table 9.4 TRENDS IN STATE PRISON POPULATION BY REGION, 2002-2003 Percent chamge from -

Total population June 30, 2003

December 31, 2003

June 30, 2002

June 30, 2002 to June 30, 2003

United States .................... Federal ............................... State ....................................

1,460,920 170,461 1,290,459

1,437,807 163,528 1,274,279

1,419,937 161,681 1,258,256

2.9% 5.4 2.6

Eastern Region Connecticut (b) .................. Delaware (b) ...................... Maine ................................. Massachusetts (c) .............. New Hampshire ................. New Jersey (d) ................... New York ........................... Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island (b) ................ Vermont (b) ........................ Regional total ....................

20,525 6,879 2,009 10,511 2,483 28,213 65,914 40,545 3,569 1,984 182,632

20,720 6,778 1,900 10,329 2,451 27,891 67,065 40,168 3,520 1,863 182,685

20,243 6,957 1,841 10,620 2,476 28,054 67,131 39,275 3,694 1,768 182,059

1.4 -1.1 9.1 -1.0 0.3 0.6 -1.8 3.2 -3.4 12.2 0.0

-0.9 1.5 5.7 1.8 1.3 1.2 -1.7 0.9 1.4 6.5 0.0

403 500 148 235 193 327 343 328 187 226 ...

Midwestern Region Illinois (d) .......................... Indiana ............................... Iowa .................................... Kansas (d) .......................... Michigan ............................ Minnesota .......................... Nebraska ............................ North Dakota ..................... Ohio (d) .............................. South Dakota ..................... Wisconsin ........................... Regional total ....................

43,186 22,576 8,395 9,009 49,524 7,612 4,103 1,168 45,831 3,059 22,366 216,829

42,693 21,611 8,398 8,935 50,961 7,129 4,058 1,112 45,646 2,918 22,133 215,594

43,142 21,425 8,172 8,758 49,961 6,958 4,031 1,168 45,349 2,900 21,963 213,827

0.1 5.4 2.7 2.9 -0.9 9.4 1.8 0.0 1.1 5.5 1.8 1.0

1.2 4.5 0.0 0.8 -2.1 6.8 1.1 5.0 0.4 4.8 1.1 1.0

341 363 285 331 491 150 232 175 401 398 393 ...

Southern Region Alabama ............................. Arkansas ............................. Florida (g) .......................... Georgia (f) ......................... Kentucky ............................ Louisiana ............................ Maryland ............................ Mississippi ......................... Missouri ............................. North Carolina ................... Oklahoma (d) ..................... South Carolina ................... Tennessee ........................... Texas .................................. Virginia .............................. West Virginia ..................... Regional total ....................

28,440 12,378 80,352 47,004 16,377 36,091 24,186 20,542 30,649 33,334 23,004 24,247 25,409 164,222 34,733 4,703 605,671

27,947 13,091 75,210 47,445 15,923 36,032 24,162 19,923 30,099 32,796 22,702 23,715 24,989 162,003 34,973 4,544 595,554

27,495 12,655 73,553 46,417 16,172 36,171 24,329 19,287 30,034 32,755 23,435 23,017 24,277 157,664 32,739 4,488 584,488

3.4 -2.2 (e) 1.3 1.3 -0.2 -0.6 6.5 2.0 1.8 (e) 5.3 4.7 4.2 (e) 4.8 4.0

1.8 -5.4 (e) -0.9 2.9 0.2 0.1 3.1 1.8 1.6 1.3 2.2 1.7 1.4 -0.7 3.5 2.0

612 445 472 541 384 803 427 688 537 348 645 561 435 692 470 257 ...

4,431 30,741 163,361 19,085 5,635 5,825 3,440 10,527 6,173 12,422 5,594 16,284 1,809 285,327

4,398 29,359 161,361 18,833 5,423 6,203 3,323 10,478 5,989 12,085 5,565 16,062 1,737 280,816

4,205 29,103 160,315 18,320 5,541 5,802 3,515 10,426 5,929 11,812 5,353 15,829 1,732 277,882

5.4 5.6 1.9 4.2 1.7 0.4 -2.1 1.0 4.1 5.2 4.5 2.9 4.4 3.0

0.8 4.7 1.2 1.3 3.9 -6.1 3.5 0.5 3.1 2.8 0.5 1.4 4.1 2.0

399 502 455 419 311 426 375 466 312 349 234 262 361 ...

121,966

119,455

117,567

4.0

2.0

...

State or other jurisdiction

Western Region Alaska (b) ........................... Arizona (f) ......................... California ........................... Colorado (d) ....................... Hawaii (b) .......................... Idaho .................................. Montana ............................. Nevada ............................... New Mexico ....................... Oregon ................................ Utah .................................... Washington ........................ Wyoming ............................ Regional total .................... Regional total without California .........

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Bulletin, Prisoners and Jail Inmates at Midyear 2003 (May 2004). Key: . . . - Not available. (a) The number of prisoners with sentences of more than one year per 100,000 residents. (b) Prisons and jails form one integrated system. Data include total jail and prison population.

December 31, 2002 to June 30, 2003 1.6% 4.2 1.3

Incarceration rate June 30, 2003 (a) 480 51 429

(c) The incarceration rate includes an estimated 6,200 inmates sentenced to more than 1 year but held in local jails or houses of corrections. (d) “Sentenced to more than 1 year” includes some inmates “sentenced to 1 year or less.” (e) Not calculated due to change in reporting. (f) Population figures are based on custody counts. (g) Population figures in 2003 are jurisdiction counts, not custody counts as in previous years.

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE/CORRECTIONS

Table 9.5 NUMBER OF SENTENCED PRISONERS ADMITTED AND RELEASED, BY REGION: 2000-2002 Releases (a)

Admissions (a)

2002

2001

2000

Percent change 2000-2002

United States ................... Federal .............................. State ...................................

663,521 48,144 615,377

639,978 45,140 593,838

625,219 43,732 581,487

6.1% 10.1 5.8

Eastern Region Connecticut ....................... Delaware (b) ..................... Maine ................................ Massachusetts ................... New Hampshire ................ New Jersey ........................ New York .......................... Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... Vermont (b) ....................... Regional total ...................

7,169 4,294 1,026 1,833 1,113 14,576 26,216 13,401 3,760 1,785 75,713

6,576 2,417 820 2,215 1,171 14,422 25,473 12,811 3,506 972 70,383

6,185 2,709 751 2,062 1,051 13,653 27,601 11,777 3,701 984 70,474

15.9 (c) 36.6 -11.1 5.9 6.8 -5.0 13.8 1.6 (c) 7.0

6,209 4,073 799 2,290 1,052 14,827 26,829 10,628 3,312 1,857 61,594

6,331 2,330 723 2,482 1,030 16,064 28,101 10,376 3,197 1,069 63,042

5,918 2,260 677 2,889 1 15,362 28,828 11,759 3,223 946 63,685

4.9 (c) 18.0 -14.8 5.2 -3.5 -6.9 -9.6 2.8 (c) 3.0

Midwestern Region Illinois ............................... Indiana .............................. Iowa ................................... Kansas ............................... Michigan ........................... Minnesota ......................... Nebraska ........................... North Dakota .................... Ohio ................................... South Dakota .................... Wisconsin .......................... Regional total ...................

34,467 14,001 5,516 4,881 14,411 5,265 1,934 768 25,689 1,819 7,990 116,741

35,289 13,012 4,826 4,502 13,105 4,620 1,783 747 24,399 1,556 7,442 111,281

29,344 11,876 4,656 5,002 12,169 4,406 1,688 605 23,780 1,400 8,396 103,322

17.5 17.9 18.5 -2.4 18.4 19.5 14.6 26.9 8.0 29.9 -4.8 13.0

36,162 13,337 5,748 4,524 12,771 4,706 1,840 770 25,322 1,797 7,699 114,676

36,313 12,207 5,357 4,270 11,928 4,250 1,738 715 24,953 1,380 7,027 110,138

28,876 11,053 4,379 5,231 10,874 4,244 1,503 598 24,793 1,327 8,158 101,036

25.2 20.7 31.3 -13.5 17.4 10.9 22.4 28.8 2.1 35.4 -5.6 14.0

Southern Region Alabama ............................ Arkansas ............................ Florida ............................... Georgia .............................. Kentucky ........................... Louisiana ........................... Maryland ........................... Mississippi ........................ Missouri ............................ North Carolina .................. Oklahoma .......................... South Carolina .................. Tennessee .......................... Texas ................................. Virginia ............................. West Virginia .................... Regional total ...................

7,033 7,080 36,500 18,078 8,731 15,079 10,027 5,655 16,637 9,661 8,269 9,834 15,022 63,446 11,392 2,161 244,605

7,428 6,977 35,064 17,342 7,450 15,667 10,399 6,880 15,183 9,433 7,872 9,218 14,295 61,276 11,310 1,783 237,577

6,296 6,941 35,683 17,373 8,116 15,735 10,327 5,796 14,454 9,848 7,426 8,460 13,675 58,197 9,791 1,577 229,695

11.7 2.0 2.3 4.1 7.6 -4.2 -2.9 -2.4 15.1 -1.9 11.4 16.2 9.9 9.0 16.4 37.0 6.0

7,472 7,640 33,728 16,608 8,313 14,847 9,617 5,592 15,127 8,606 8,375 8,604 13,541 64,720 10,033 1,807 234,630

7,905 6,613 34,015 15,758 8,234 15,031 10,050 5,685 13,892 8,935 8,265 8,627 12,690 66,228 9,816 1,422 233,166

7,136 6,308 33,994 14,797 7,733 14,536 10,004 4,940 13,346 9,687 6,628 8,676 13,893 59,776 9,148 1,261 221,863

4.7 21.1 -0.8 12.2 7.5 2.1 -3.9 13.2 13.3 -11.2 26.4 -0.8 -2.5 8.3 9.7 43.3 6.0

2,775 11,468 124,179 7,953 1,892 3,049 1,510 4,844 4,009 5,041 3,064 8,305 769 178,858

2,142 10,000 126,895 7,252 1,700 2,699 1,472 4,639 2,545 4,473 2,864 7,185 731 174,597

2,427 9,560 129,640 7,036 1,594 3,386 1,202 4,929 3,161 4,059 3,270 7,094 638 177,996

14.3 20.0 -4.2 13.0 18.7 -10.0 25.6 -1.7 26.8 24.2 -6.3 (c) 20.5 0.0

2,394 10,056 119,683 6,588 1,735 2,855 1,518 4,734 3,809 4,339 2,864 7,401 686 168,662

2,041 9,053 129,982 6,634 1,581 2,539 1,246 4,480 3,194 3,668 3,151 6,957 723 175,249

2,599 9,100 129,621 5,881 1,379 2,697 1,031 4,374 3,383 3,371 2,897 6,764 697 173,794

-7.9 10.5 -7.7 12.0 25.8 5.9 47.2 8.2 12.6 28.7 -1.1 (c) -1.6 -3.0

54,679

47,702

48,356

13.0

48,979

45,267

44,173

11.0

State or other jurisdiction

Western Region Alaska ............................... Arizona .............................. California .......................... Colorado ............................ Hawaii ............................... Idaho ................................. Montana ............................ Nevada .............................. New Mexico ...................... Oregon ............................... Utah ................................... Washington (b) ................. Wyoming ........................... Regional total ................... Regional total without California ........

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Bulletin, Prisoners and Jail Inmates at Midyear 2003 (May 2004). Note: Excludes AWOL’s and transfers to or from other jurisdictions. Key: (a) Based on inmates under jurisdiction with a sentence of more than one year.

602

9-5

2002

2001

2000

632,183 42,339 589,844

628,626 38,370 591,256

604,858 35,259 569,599

4.5% 20.6 3.6

(b) Data may not be comparable from year to year due to changing reporting methods. (c) Not calculated due to changes in reporting.

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Percent change 2000-2002

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE/CORRECTIONS

Table 9.6 ADULTS ON PROBATION BY REGION, 2003 Probation population 2003

State or other jurisdiction

1/1/03

Entries

Exits

12/31/03

United States ......................

4,024,067

2,229,668

2,179,847

4,073,987

Federal ................................

31,330

13,989

14,449

30,599

-2.3

14

State .....................................

3,992,737

2,215,679

2,165,398

4,043,388

1.3

1,862

Eastern Region Connecticut .......................... Delaware .............................. Maine ................................... Massachusetts (a)(b)(c) ....... New Hampshire (d) ............. New Jersey ........................... New York (b) ....................... Pennsylvania (c) .................. Rhode Island ........................ Vermont ................................ Regional total ......................

50,984 20,201 9,446 131,319 3,702 134,290 132,966 130,786 25,914 10,096 649,704

24,384 13,962 6,625 56,933 1,480 40,601 39,590 52,072 6,451 4,908 247,006

23,176 15,242 6,216 61,117 1,052 50,610 48,261 45,652 6,436 5,202 262,964

52,192 18,921 9,855 127,135 4,130 124,281 124,295 137,206 25,929 9,802 633,746

2.4 -6.3 4.3 ... 11.6 -7.5 -6.5 4.9 0.1 -2.9 -2.0

1,983 3,058 984 2,585 426 1,907 859 1,454 3,143 2,085 18,484

Midwestern Region Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................. Iowa ...................................... Kansas (c) ............................ Michigan (c) (d) .................. Minnesota ............................ Nebraska .............................. North Dakota ....................... Ohio (c) (d) .......................... South Dakota ....................... Wisconsin ............................. Regional total ......................

141,544 114,209 19,970 15,217 174,577 122,692 16,468 3,229 215,186 5,088 54,614 882,794

63,000 94,741 14,600 23,315 130,857 59,517 15,845 2,332 146,723 3,261 25,449 579,640

60,090 97,324 13,685 23,981 129,029 71,484 13,901 2,059 142,616 3,129 24,727 582,025

144,454 111,626 20,885 14,551 176,392 110,725 18,412 3,502 219,658 5,236 55,336 880,777

2.1 -2.3 4.6 -4.4 1.0 -9.8 11.8 8.5 2.1 2.9 1.3 0.2

1,542 2,424 945 725 2,364 2,953 1,432 737 2,573 933 1,354 17,982

Southern Region Alabama ............................... Arkansas ............................... Florida (c)(d) ....................... Georgia (c)(e) ...................... Kentucky (c) ........................ Louisiana .............................. Maryland .............................. Mississippi (c)(f) ................. Missouri ............................... North Carolina ..................... Oklahoma (d) ....................... South Carolina ..................... Tennessee (c) ....................... Texas .................................... Virginia ................................ West Virginia (c) .................. Regional total ......................

39,713 27,377 291,315 367,349 24,480 36,257 81,982 16,633 54,584 112,900 29,881 41,574 42,712 434,486 40,359 6,430 1,648,032

15,152 9,168 257,539 230,686 16,165 13,875 39,037 8,773 26,512 60,782 15,299 14,760 24,256 200,450 30,669 3,072 966,195

15,213 8,419 261,212 173,650 11,949 13,455 43,144 6,290 25,486 60,521 16,854 16,287 24,132 202,947 29,365 2,638 911,562

39,652 28,126 287,641 424,385 28,696 36,677 77,875 18,116 55610 113161 28,326 40,047 42,836 431,989 41,663 6,864 1,701,664

-0.2 2.7 -1.3 ... 17.2 1.2 -5.0 14.9 1.9 0.2 -5.2 -3.7 0.3 -0.6 3.2 6.7 3.2

1,177 1,380 2,169 ... 921 1,120 1,890 911 1,305 1,770 1,082 1,285 968 2,698 743 487 19,906

3.4 -1.0 4.6 -3.5 5.2 2.7 3.1 -1.1 -0.9 -1.3 -2.5 0.7 1.4 2.0

1,185 1,586 1,441 1,623 1,822 ... 1,006 716 1,186 1,662 646 3,767 1,255 17,895

-0.9

16,454

Western Region Alaska .................................. Arizona (d) ........................... California (d) ....................... Colorado (c)(d) .................... Hawaii .................................. Idaho (d) (g) ......................... Montana ............................... Nevada ................................. New Mexico ......................... Oregon .................................. Utah ...................................... Washington (c)(d) ................ Wyoming .............................. Regional total ...................... Regional total without California ...........

5,229 66,485 358,121 57,328 16,772 31,361 6,703 12,290 16,287 45,397 10,646 171,603 4,596 802

973 39,115 180,636 28,954 7,006 25,360 3,898 5,869 7,662 16,275 5,429 93,132 1,932 416,241

796 39,795 164,059 30,985 6,126 24,501 3,687 6,000 7,813 16,847 5,696 91,921 1,866 400,092

5,406 65,805 374,701 55,297 17,652 32,220 6,914 12,159 16,136 44,825 10,379 172,814 4,662 818,970

444,697

235,605

236,033

444,269

Dist. of Columbia (c)(d) ......

9,389

6,597

8,755

7,231

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Probation and Parole in the United States, 2003, (July 2004). Note: Because of incomplete data, the population for some jurisdictions on December 31, 2003, does not equal the population on January 1, 2003, plus entries, minus exits. Key: . . . — Not calculated. (a) Data are for June 30, 2002 and 2003. Some data for June 30, 2002 , were estimated.

Percent change during 2003

Number on probation on 12/31/03 per 100,000 adult residents

1.2%

...

1,876

1,612

(b) Due to changes in reporting criteria, data are not comparable to previous reports. (c) Data for entries and exits were estimated for nonreporting agencies. (d) All data were estimated. (e) Counts include private agency cases and may overstate the number under supervision. (f) Data are for year ending December 1, 2003. (g) Counts include estimates for misdemeanors based on annual admissions.

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Table 9.7 ADULTS ON PAROLE BY REGION, 2003 Parole population State or other jurisdiction

2003 Entries

Exits

750,934

492,727

470,538

774,588

0.0

Federal ................................

83,063

33,590

31,088

86,459

4.1

40

State .....................................

667,871

459,137

439,450

688,129

3.0

317

Eastern Region Connecticut .......................... Delaware .............................. Maine ................................... Massachusetts ...................... New Hampshire (a) ............. New Jersey ........................... New York ............................. Pennsylvania (b) .................. Rhode Island ........................ Vermont ................................ Regional total ......................

2,186 551 32 3,951 963 12,576 55,990 97,712 384 797 175,142

3,260 217 0 6,305 719 10,322 25,049 30,870 456 400 77,598

2,847 239 0 6,552 482 9,650 25,186 26,338 448 400 72,142

2,599 529 32 3,704 1,200 13,248 55,853 102,244 392 797 180,598

18.9 -4.0 0.0 -6.3 24.6 5.3 -0.2 4.6 2.1 0.0 3.1

99 85 3 370 124 203 386 1,084 48 170 2,572

Midwestern Region Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................. Iowa (c) ................................ Kansas (c) ............................ Michigan .............................. Minnesota ............................ Nebraska .............................. North Dakota ....................... Ohio ...................................... South Dakota ....................... Wisconsin ............................. Regional total ......................

35,458 5,877 2,787 3,990 17,648 3,577 574 148 17,853 1,640 11,088 100,640

32,476 7,304 2,787 4,146 12,579 4,121 839 585 11,670 1,451 6,877 84,835

32,926 6,162 2,475 3,991 9,994 4,102 763 507 11,096 1147 5,999 79,162

35,008 7,019 3,099 4,145 20,233 3,596 650 226 18,427 1,944 11,966 106,313

-1.3 19.4 11.2 3.9 14.6 0.5 13.2 52.7 3.2 18.5 7.9 5.6

374 152 140 207 271 96 51 48 216 346 293 2,194

Southern Region Alabama ............................... Arkansas ............................... Florida .................................. Georgia ................................. Kentucky (c) ........................ Louisiana .............................. Maryland .............................. Mississippi (d) ..................... Missouri ............................... North Carolina ..................... Oklahoma (a) ....................... South Carolina ..................... Tennessee ............................. Texas (a) ............................... Virginia ................................ West Virginia ....................... Regional total ......................

5,309 12,128 5,223 20,822 5,968 23,049 13,271 1,816 13,533 2,805 3,573 3,491 7,949 103,068 4,530 999 227,534

4,098 7,379 4,409 11,738 4,719 13,468 8,059 1,103 10,407 3,214 1,995 1,025 3,130 32,847 2,779 826 111,196

2,457 5,813 4,680 10,391 3,115 11,452 7,588 963 8,720 3,342 1,521 1,306 3,314 33,644 2,475 682 101,463

6,950 13,694 4,952 22,135 7,572 25,065 13,742 1,816 15,220 2,677 4,047 3,210 7,967 102,271 4,834 1,143 237,295

30.9 12.9 -5.2 6.3 26.9 8.7 3.5 0.0 12.5 -4.6 ... -8.0 0.2 -0.8 6.7 14.4 4.3

206 672 37 344 243 766 334 87 357 42 155 103 180 639 86 81 4332

900 4,587 113,185 6,215 2,525 1,961 845 3,971 1,962 19,090 3,352 95 570 159,258

614 8,895 148,915 5,298 906 1,486 601 2,956 1,977 8,059 2,300 45 319 182,371

587 8,115 152,305 4,954 1,191 1,118 631 2,801 1,532 7,380 2,353 35 311 183,313

927 5,367 110,338 6,559 2,240 2,329 815 4,126 2,407 19,769 3,299 105 578 158,859

... 17.0 -2.5 5.5 -11.3 18.8 -3.6 3.9 22.7 3.6 -1.6 10.5 1.4 -0.2

203 129 424 193 231 236 119 243 177 733 205 2 156 3,051

44,372

30,278

25,366

49,282

5.3

2,627

5,297

3,136

3,369

5,064

Dist. of Columbia (a)(b) ......

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Justice Statistics, Probation and Parole in the United States, 2003 (July 2004). Note: Because of incomplete data, the population on December 31, 2003, does not equal the population on January 1, 2003, plus entries, minus exits. Key: . . . —Number not calcualted.

604

9-7

12/31/2003

Number on parole on 12/31/03 per 100,000 adult residents

United States ......................

Western Region Alaska (c) ............................. Arizona (b) ........................... California (c) ....................... Colorado ............................... Hawaii .................................. Idaho .................................... Montana (c) .......................... Nevada ................................. New Mexico ......................... Oregon .................................. Utah ...................................... Washington (a) ..................... Wyoming .............................. Regional total ...................... Regional total without California ...........

1/1/2003

Percent change during 2003

...

1129

(a) All data were estimated. (b) Data for entries and exits were estimated for nonreporting agencies. (c) Excludes parolees in one of the following categories: absconder, out of state, or inactive. (d) Data are for the year ending December 1, 2003.

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CRIMINAL JUSTICE/CORRECTIONS

Table 9.8 CAPITAL PUNISHMENT (as of December 2003) Minimum age 16

Prisoners under sentence Method of death of execution 192 Electrocution or lethal injection

State or other jurisdiction Alabama ..............................

Capital offenses Intentional murder with 18 aggravating factors.

Alaska ..................................

...

...

...

...

Arizona ................................

First degree murder accompanied by at least 1 of 10 aggravating factors. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

(l)

123

Lethal gas or lethal injection (a)

Arkansas .............................

Capital murder with a finding of at least 1 of 10 aggravating circumstances; treason. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

14 (m)

40

Lethal injection or electrocution (b)

California ............................

First-degree murder with special circumstances; train-wrecking; treason; perjury causing execution.

18

629

Lethal gas or lethal injection

Colorado .............................

First-degree murder with at least 1 of 17 aggravating factors; treason. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

18

3

Lethal injection

Connecticut .........................

Capital felony with 8 forms of aggravated homicide. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

18 (n)

7

Lethal injection

Delaware .............................

First-degree murder with aggravating circumstances. 16 Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

16

Hanging or lethal injection (c)

Florida .................................

First-degree murder; felony murder; capital drug-trafficking; capital sexual battery. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

17

364

Electrocution or lethal injection

Georgia ................................

Murder; kidnapping with bodily injury or ransom when the victim dies; aircraft hijacking; treason. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

17

111

Lethal injection

Hawaii .................................

...

...

...

...

Idaho ....................................

First-degree murder with aggravating factors; aggravated kidnapping.

(l)

19

Firing Squad or lethal injection

Illinois ..................................

First-degree murder with 1 of 21 aggravating circumstances.

18

2

Lethal injection

Indiana ................................

Murder with 16 aggravating circumstances. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

18

35

Lethal injection

Iowa .....................................

...

...

...

Kansas .................................

Capital murder with 8 aggravating circumstances. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

18

6

Lethal injection

Kentucky .............................

Murder with aggravating factors; kidnapping with aggravating factors. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

16

35

Electrocution or lethal injection (d)

Louisiana ............................

First-degree murder; aggravated rape of victim under age 12; treason. (l)

87

Lethal injection

Maine ...................................

...

...

...

...

Maryland ............................

First-degree murder, either premeditated or during the commission of a 18 felony, provided that certain death eligibility requirements are satisfied. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

11

Lethal injection

Massachusetts ....................

...

...

...

...

Michigan .............................

...

...

...

...

Minnesota ...........................

...

...

...

...

Mississippi ..........................

Capital murder; aircraft piracy.

16 (o)

66

Lethal injection

Missouri ..............................

First-degree murder. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

18 (r)

52

Lethal injection or lethal gas

Montana ..............................

Capital murder with 1 of 9 aggravating circumstances; capital sexual assault.

(p)

5

Lethal injection

Nebraska .............................

First-degree murder with a finding of at least 1 statutorily-defined aggravating circumstance. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

18

7

Electrocution

Nevada .................................

First-degree murder with at least 1 of 14 aggravating circumstances. 16

84

Lethal injection

New Hampshire ..................

Six categories of capital murder.

17

0

Lethal injection or hanging (e)

New Jersey ..........................

Murder by one’s own conduct; committed in furtherance of a 18 narcotics conspiracy, or during the commission of the crime of terrorism.

14

Lethal injection

...

See footnotes at end of table.

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CAPITAL PUNISHMENT— Continued State or other jurisdiction New Mexico ........................

Capital offenses First-degree murder with at least 1 of 7 statutorily-defined aggravating circumstances. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

New York .............................

First-degree murder with 1 of 13 aggravating factors. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

North Carolina ...................

First-degree murder. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

North Dakota .....................

...

Ohio ..................................... Oklahoma ...........................

First-degree murder in conjunction with a finding of at least 1 of 8 statutorily-defined aggravating circumstances.

16

Oregon .................................

Aggravated murder.

Pennsylvania ......................

First-degree murder with 18 aggravating circumstances.

Rhode Island ......................

Prisoners under sentence Method of death of execution 2 Lethal injection

18

5

Lethal injection

17 (f)

195

Lethal injection

...

...

...

Aggravated murder with at least 1 of 10 aggravating circumstances. 18

209

Lethal injection

102

Lethal injection, electrocution or firing squad (g)

18

28

Lethal injection

(l)

230

Lethal injection

...

...

...

...

South Carolina ...................

Murder with 1 of 10 aggravating circumstances. (k)

(l)

71

Electrocution or lethal injection

South Dakota ......................

First-degree murder with 1 of 10 aggravating circumstances; aggravated kidnapping. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

(q)

4

Lethal injection

Tennessee ............................

First-degree murder with 1 of 15 aggravating circumstances. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

18

96

Lethal injection or electrocution (h)

Texas ....................................

Criminal homicide with 1 of 8 aggravating circumstances.

17

453

Lethal injection

Utah .....................................

Aggravated murder. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

14 (j)

10

Lethal injection or firing squad

Vermont ..............................

...

...

...

...

Virginia ...............................

First-degree murder with 1 of 13 aggravating circumstances. mentally retarded. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

14 (j)

27

Electrocution or lethal injection

Washington .........................

Aggravated first-degree murder. Capital sentencing excludes persons determined to be mentally retarded.

18

10

Lethal injection or hanging

West Virginia ......................

...

...

...

...

Wisconsin ............................

...

...

...

...

Wyoming .............................

First-degree murder.

16

1

Dist. of Columbia ...............

...

...

...

Sources: U.S. Department of Justice, Bureau of Statistics, Capital Punishment, 2003(November 2004). Note: There were seven prisoners sentenced to death in more than one state. They are included for each state in which they were sentenced to death. Key: . . . — No capital punishment statute. (a) Arizona authorizes lethal injection for persons whose capital sentence was received after 11/15/92; for those sentenced before that date, the condemned may select lethal injection or lethal gas. (b) Arkansas authorizes lethal injection for those whose capital offense occurred on or after 7/4/83; for those whose offense occurred before that date, the condemned may select lethal injection or electrocution. (c) Delaware authorizes lethal injection for those whose capital offense occurred after 6/13/86; for those whose offense occurred before that date, the condemned may select lethal injection or hanging. (d) Kentucky authorizes lethal injection for persons whose capital sentence was received on or after 3/31/98; for those sentenced before that date, the condemned may select lethal injection or electrocution. (e) New Hampshire authorizes hanging only if lethal injection cannot be given. (f) The age required is 17 unless the murderer was incarcerated for murder when a subsequent murder occurred; then the age may be 14. (g) Oklahoma authorizes electrocution if lethal injection is ever held to

606

9-8

Minimum age 18

...

be unconstitutional, and firing squad if both lethal injection and electrocution are held unconstitutional. (h) Tennessee authorizes lethal injection for those whose capital offense occurred after 12/31/98; those whose offense occurred before that date may select electrocution. (i) Wyoming authorizes lethal gas if lethal injection is ever held to be unconstitutional. (j) The minimum age for transfer to adult court by statute is 14, but the effective age is 16 based on interpretation of U.S. Supreme Court decisions by the state attorney general’s office. (k) Mental retardation is a mitigating factor. (l) No age specified. (m) See Arkansas Code Ann. 9-27-318(c)(2)(Supp. 2001). (n) See Connecticut Gen. Stat. 53a-46a(g)(1). (o) The minimum age defined by statute is 13, but the effective age is 16 based on interpretation of U.S. Supreme Court decisions by the Mississippi Supreme Court. (p) Montana law specifies that offenders tried under the capital sexual assault statute be 18 or older. Age may be a mitigating factor for other capital crimes. (q) Juveniles may be transferred to adult court. Age can be a mitigating factor. (r) The minimum age defined by statute is 16, but the effective age is 18 based on interpretation of the 8th Amendment of the U. S. Constitution by the Missouri Supreme Court.

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WELFARE

Trends in Welfare Programs By Sheila R. Zedlewski and Jennifer Holland Lawmakers on Capitol Hill have been stalemated in their attempts to reauthorize the nation’s welfare bill. The stalemate between the House (following the administration’s lead) and the Senate over work requirements, childcare dollars and superwaivers has left the original welfare bill unchanged through several “continuing resolutions.” In the meantime, states’ welfare programs have weathered an economic downturn. While nationwide caseloads continued to decline, some states experienced significant increases in their caseloads. While all states funded a broad array of services as well as basic assistance through their welfare programs, there was considerable variation in funding emphasis. States’ flexibility could be curtailed in the future, however, if reauthorization proceeds along the lines proposed.

Recent Caseload Experience Nationwide, Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) caseloads have dropped by more than half since passage of welfare reform in 1996. While most of the decline occurred in the first few years after the reforms passed, caseloads continued to decline following the 2000 recession and subsequent sluggish recovery. Caseloads fell below 2 million families in December 2003, the lowest level in over 30 years. These national trends mask important differences across the states. Since 2000 caseloads have increased in 23 states (Table A); eight states experienced increases of 30 percent or more (Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Indiana, Mississippi, Nevada, West Virginia and Wisconsin). Caseload trends during this period of economic decline have stumped many scholars. Most would have predicted caseload increases in all states that experienced increased unemployment, but this did not happen. The national unemployment rate increased gradually between 2000 and 2003 (from 4 percent to 6 percent), but caseloads decreased. State unemployment rates tended to follow the national pattern, and states with the highest unemployment often did not experience rapid caseload growth. For example, state unemployment rates in 2003 ranged from about 4 percent (in Delaware, Georgia, Nebraska, New Hampshire, North Dakota, South Dakota, Virginia and Wyoming) to 8 percent (Alaska, Michigan, Oregon and Washington).1 Three of the four states with the highest unemployment rates also experienced relatively fast growth in unemployment between 2000 and 2003 (Michigan, Oregon and Washington), but these states experienced either relatively modest or no growth in their TANF caseloads.

Other factors also affect caseloads, including states’ TANF programs and their unemployment insurance programs. Some TANF programs discourage entry through diversion, work requirements, strict sanctions, and time limits. Research has shown that new program rules have reduced entry rates.2 Eligible families are less likely to apply for welfare in the new system, making TANF less sensitive to unemployment rate changes. The role that unemployment insurance has played in limiting caseload growth during this period of rising unemployment is not yet clear. Prior to passage of welfare reform, many studies showed that few adults leaving welfare gained eligibility for unemployment compensation. However, post-reform evidence suggests that a larger share of former welfare recipients should have qualified for unemployment insurance at least for some time.3 Another factor at play may be use of other safety net programs to tide former and potential welfare recipients over when jobs are scarce. In contrast to welfare, food stamp caseloads increased by about 30 percent between 2000 and 2003. A recent study found that a substantially larger share of former welfare recipients received these benefits in 2002 than in 1999. The author concludes that changes in states’ administrative procedures that keep food stamp cases open after families leave welfare and new rules liberalizing the vehicle limits and recertification procedures played an important role in increasing food stamp participation among former welfare recipients.4

Caseload Work Participation Caseload work participation rates also provide an important indicator of how states’ welfare programs The Council of State Governments

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WELFARE have weathered the recent economic downturn. Work participation rates have moderated somewhat since 1999. Thirty-three percent of the TANF caseload was engaged in work in 2002 (the latest data available), compared with 38 percent in 1999. Participation rates varied from a low of 8 percent in Georgia and Maryland to over 80 percent in Kansas, Montana and Wyoming (Table A). While the federal work participation target was 50 percent in 2002, all states met the target because of the caseload reduction credit.5 After accounting for the credit, states only had to meet an average work participation rate of 6 percent, and only 11 states had to meet a work participation rate greater than 10 percent. States achieved substantially more than was required by the federal rules. Comparisons of the work participation rates across the states can be somewhat misleading because the meaning of the rates varies across the states. Some states exclude families with a child younger than age one from work activities and their work participation rate calculation, and waivers that had been approved before 1996 were still in place in 11 states in 2002 can affect states’ participation rate calculations. For example, Massachusetts’ waiver allows them to exclude families from work requirements until they have received assistance for 24 months. Only 23 percent of the single-parent caseload is included in Massachusetts’ work participation calculation. At the other extreme, all families are included in the participation rate calculation in Oregon and 95 percent or more are included in Maine, Utah and Montana.6

TANF Spending States spent over $29 billion on TANF-related expenditures in 2003, including $2.7 billion in transfers to the Child Care Development Fund (CCDF) and the Social Services Block Grant (SSBG). Total TANF expenditures ($26.3 billion) were at the highest level since the program began. Basic assistance only accounted for 35 percent of spending. Shares spent on other key areas include 9 percent on work activities, 18 percent on childcare, and 8 percent on administration (Table B). Expenditures in the “other category” accounted for 29 percent of the remaining spending and include transportation, separate state programs, tax credits, marriage and family formation, out-of-wedlock pregnancy prevention activities. Individual states’ spending patterns varied considerably from these national averages. Basic assistance accounted for half or more of spending in six states (Hawaii, Maine, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Jersey and New Mexico). At the other extreme, six 608

00M-Zedlewski

states spent less than 20 percent on basic (including Colorado, Idaho, Illinois, Maryland, Wisconsin and Wyoming). The share of total spending on work-related activities varied from 0 percent in 10 states (Colorado, Delaware, Maine, Oklahoma, Oregon, Vermont and West Virginia) to over 20 percent in Maryland, Utah and Virginia. South Carolina stands out because it spent one-third of its TANF expenditures on work-related activities. Some states devoted more of their TANF monies to childcare services than other states. Nationwide over $5 billion in TANF dollars were spent for childcare in 2003. Nine states (Delaware, DC, Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Washington and Wisconsin) spent at least three in 10 TANF dollars on this type of work support. Only a handful of states spent significantly more than the national average on administration. Colorado, Nevada, New Hampshire and Utah report spending more than twice the national average to administer their programs. These spending patterns indicate the unique configurations of states’ TANF programs. Particular combinations of spending (such as low basic assistance and high child care) do not tend to stand out. Instead, states focused on activities that fit their lowincome families’ needs and that fit with other spending programs in the state.

Congressional Action Congressional proposals suggest that TANF reauthorization will reduce states’ flexibility and sharpen the program’s focus on work participation goals. Proposals in the House and the Senate would increase the share of the caseload required to work from today’s 50 percent to 70 percent by 2010.7 They disagree, however, on how work participation rates would be calculated. The House would maintain a caseload reduction credit, but base it on recent caseload experience. The Senate Finance Committee would move to an employment credit based on the employment rates of families leaving TANF. The House and Senate Finance proposals also differ on the number of weekly hours of work that should be required and the types of activity that can count as work. The House proposes requiring all mothers on welfare to work a 40 hour week—up from 30 hours under current law—and 24 hours would have to be in a paid or unpaid job rather than such work-related activities as training and education. The Senate Finance Committee proposes a 34 hour per week work requirement (24 hours for mothers of preschoolers) and gives states more flexibility to count education

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WELFARE and training as work activities. Both proposals would increase childcare funds. The House proposal would provide an additional $1 billion over five years (with a state match required), and they would authorize (but not guarantee) additional childcare dollars. The Senate Finance bill would add $6 billion in new child care funding over five years. The added childcare dollars could provide important relief to the states as they comply with tougher work requirements. The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) estimated that the new work requirements in the House proposal would cost states between $3 billion and $9 billion over five years, and Senate Finance Committee’s work provisions would cost from $1.1 and $1.5 billion.8 Both proposals also earmark about $200 million of federal TANF monies for marriage activities over five years. Since the basic block grant would remain fixed at 1996 levels, most states would need to redirect TANF funds from current activities to meet the new requirements. The remaining major disagreement between the House and the Senate Finance Committee concerns “superwaivers.” The House proposal would allow states to waive federal rules for food stamps, public housing, and childcare and redirect these monies to low-income families in new ways. Senate Finance, in contrast, proposes a 10-state superwaiver demonstration limited to childcare, TANF, and Social Services Block grant.

Conclusion The economic downturn had modest effects on the TANF program. Caseloads increased in 23 states, reversing stunning declines witnessed at the beginning of the program. Caseload work participation rates declined somewhat, although all states still met their targets because of the caseload reduction credits in the current law. Despite caseload increases, most states still spent a relatively small share of their TANF funds on basic assistance. States continued to focus TANF monies on childcare and other types of support services. Most spent relatively little directly on work-related activities in 2003. Congressional proposals for TANF reauthorization would require many states to change their TANF programs. Areas of agreement between both Houses suggest that a final bill will toughen work requirements and change the participation rate offset either to one based on more recent caseload experience or a credit based on actual employment rates of welfare leavers. Most states will need to shift more spending towards work-related activi-

ties, and some may find it necessary to create jobs to meet the new requirements. The additional dollars for childcare in the Senate Finance bill would help states to meet the new requirements. However, the additional childcare dollars are far from certain. Federal budget deficit reduction goals may take precedence over helping states to meet new, tougher work requirements.

Notes 1 Bureau of Labor Statistics, U.S. Department of Labor, “Over-the-Year Change in Unemployment Rates for States,” downloaded from www.bls.gov, December 17, 2004. 2 Greg Acs, Katherin Ross Phillips, and Sandi Nelson, “The Road Not Taken: Changes in Welfare Entry During the 1990s,” December 2003). 3 See Anu Rangarajan and Carol Razafindrakoto, “Unemployment Insurance as a Potential Safety Net for TANF Leavers: Evidence from Five States,” Washington, D.C.: Mathematica Policy Research, 2004. 4 See Sheila Zedlewski, “Recent Trends in Food Stamp Participation among Poor Families with Children,” Washington, D.C.: The Urban Institute, Assessing the New Federalism Working Paper 04–03, 2004. 5 The caseload reduction credit allows states to reduce participation rates by one percentage point for each percentage point decline in the caseload since fiscal year 1995. 6 Pavetti, LaDonna, “The Challenge of Achieving High Work Participation Rates in Welfare Programs,” Washington, D.C.: The Brookings Institution, Welfare Reform and Beyond Number 31, October 2004. 7 The discussion reflects the 2005 proposal of the House Human Resources Subcommittee which mirrors the bill passed by the full House in 2004 and the bill passed by the Senate Finance Committee in March 2005. Both the House and Senate expect to move these proposals to full floor action in 2005 8 Congressional Budget Office, “Potential Cost to States of Meeting Proposed Work Requirement,” (Washington, D.C.: CBO, September 2003).

About the Authors Sheila R. Zedlewski is the director of the Income and Benefits Policy Center at the Urban Institute, a nonpartisan think tank located in Washington, D.C. She also manages the income and employment area of the Institute’s Assessing the New Federalism project. Her recent work focuses on understanding low-income family participation in government programs. She has written extensively about the TANF program with a focus on families unable to move from welfare to work.

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completion of her B.A. at Vassar College in 2002, she has focused on issues related to the TANF program.

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Table A TRENDS IN TANF CASELOAD, 1996–2003 TANF family caseload State or other jurisdiction

Percent change from

December 2003 (a)

Average monthly FY 2000

Average monthly FY 1996

1996–2000

2000–2003

Alabama ............................. Alaska ................................. Arizona ............................... Arkansas ............................ California ...........................

19,525 4,900 52,170 10,695 449,132

19,083 7,347 33,723 12,354 498,414

42,393 12,253 63,404 22,747 895,960

-55.0% -40.0 -46.8 -45.7 -44.4

2.3% -33.3 54.7 -13.4 -9.9

37.3% 39.6 25.9 21.4 27.3

Colorado ............................ Connecticut ........................ Delaware ............................ Florida ................................ Georgia ...............................

14,654 20,975 5,705 59,538 57,359

11,154 28,095 6,058 67,355 52,928

35,447 58,117 10,388 209,718 130,387

-68.5 -51.7 -41.7 -67.9 -59.4

31.4 -25.3 -5.8 -11.6 8.4

35.9 26.6 25.8 30.4 8.2

Hawaii ................................ Idaho ................................... Illinois ................................. Indiana ............................... Iowa ....................................

9,080 1,844 34,856 51,663 19,959

14,438 1,275 83,917 35,872 20,025

21,960 9,008 224,148 52,873 32,785

-34.3 -85.8 -62.6 -32.2 -38.9

-37.1 44.6 -58.5 44.0 -0.3

58.8 40.7 58.4 62.6 51.2

Kansas ................................ Kentucky ............................ Louisiana ........................... Maine .................................. Maryland ...........................

16,156 35,728 21,215 9,676 26,850

12,585 38,542 27,820 10,864 29,313

25,148 71,827 70,581 20,461 74,106

-50.0 -46.3 -60.6 -46.9 -60.4

28.4 -7.3 -23.7 -10.9 -8.4

84.8 32.4 38.7 44.5 8.3

Massachusetts ................... Michigan ............................ Minnesota .......................... Mississippi ......................... Missouri .............................

50,300 79,051 34,571 19,769 41,586

44,189 74,231 39,040 14,970 46,776

88,365 178,002 58,250 47,954 82,717

-50.0 -58.3 -33.0 -68.8 -43.5

13.8 6.5 -11.4 32.1 -11.1

60.9 28.9 40.4 18.5 25.4

Montana ............................. Nebraska ............................ Nevada ................................ New Hampshire ................. New Jersey .........................

5,349 11,049 9,345 6,022 43,589

4,555 9,538 6,274 5,841 51,630

10,836 14,569 14,827 9,538 105,504

-58.0 -34.5 -57.7 -38.8 -51.1

17.4 15.8 79.0 3.1 -15.6

84.2 28.1 21.6 41.8 36.4

New Mexico ....................... New York ............................ North Carolina .................. North Dakota .................... Ohio ....................................

17,606 146,952 39,124 3,190 84,781

23,655 258,702 45,725 2,901 97,969

33,852 431,717 113,127 4,892 206,722

-30.1 -40.1 -59.6 -40.7 -52.6

-25.6 -43.2 -14.4 10.0 -13.5

42.7 38.5 27.4 30.4 56.3

Oklahoma .......................... Oregon ................................ Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... South Carolina ..................

14,921 18,223 85,198 12,693 18,931

14,316 17,058 89,899 16,324 17,502

38,809 33,444 190,329 21,226 45,770

-63.1 -49.0 -52.8 -23.1 -61.8

4.2 6.8 -5.2 -22.2 8.2

26.7 61.1 10.4 24.6 52.4

South Dakota ..................... Tenneessee .......................... Texas ................................... Utah .................................... Vermont .............................

2,809 72,162 113,763 9,037 4,779

2,802 56,148 127,880 8,410 6,043

5,995 99,096 254,953 14,767 9,057

-53.3 -43.3 -49.8 -43.1 -33.3

0.3 28.5 -11.0 7.5 -20.9

42.5 41.2 30.8 27.9 21.4

Virginia .............................. Washington ........................ West Virginia ..................... Wisconsin ........................... Wyoming ............................

9,185 54,763 16,340 22,043 379

31,864 57,008 12,146 16,719 604

64,937 98,933 36,562 60,058 4,732

-50.9 -42.4 -66.8 -72.2 -87.2

-71.2 -3.9 34.5 31.8 -37.2

42.9 49.8 19.2 69.4 82.9

Dist. of Columbia .............. United States .....................

17,221 1,986,411

17,439 2,229,315

25,721 4,488,974

-32.2 -50.3

-1.3 -10.9

16.4 33.4

Sources: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, 2004. Total Number of TANF Families and Recipients Fiscal Year 2004 as of 7/31/04. http://www.acf.hhs.gov/news/press/ 2004/TANF_data.htm, and Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) Sixth Annual Report to Congress. http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ofa/ annualreport6/ar6index.htm.

Work participation rates FY 2002 (b)

Key: (a) Average monthly caseload for FY 2003 not available at time of publication. Most recent 2003 monthly caseload data included here. (b) Work participation rate for all families, including two parent families. ACF/OFA: 4/25/03.

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Table B TANF SPENDING: COMBINED FEDERAL AND STATE, FY 2003 State or other jurisdiction

Total expenditures (federal and state) (a)

Percentage of basic assistance

Percentage of work related activities

Percentage of child care (b)

Percentage of administrative

Percentage of other

Alabama ............................. Alaska ................................. Arizona ............................... Arkansas ............................ California ...........................

201,718,633 107,977,794 364,419,429 60,234,711 6,505,509,884

23% 46 48 37 48

10% 12 6 15 7

31% 23 12 13 20

7% 6 10 13 9

29% 12 24 23 16

Colorado ............................ Connecticut ........................ Delaware ............................ Florida ................................ Georgia ...............................

273,392,839 476,612,663 59,055,509 1,026,846,722 551,615,768

19 28 34 24 31

0 7 0 9 19

9 8 37 35 10

16 5 7 5 3

56 52 22 27 37

Hawaii ................................ Idaho ................................... Illinois ................................. Indiana ............................... Iowa ....................................

155,010,178 53,314,453 1,009,914,813 333,686,775 195,556,172

59 12 11 42 41

7 14 10 9 9

17 21 37 10 20

10 6 3 11 6

7 47 39 28 24

Kansas ................................ Kentucky ............................ Louisiana ........................... Maine .................................. Maryland ...........................

167,134,597 238,189,893 322,696,728 118,179,675 437,716,868

33 43 21 56 7

6 13 12 0 23

11 28 15 19 17

6 8 9 8 9

44 8 43 17 44

Massachusetts ................... Michigan ............................ Minnesota .......................... Mississippi ......................... Missouri .............................

830,647,417 1,224,872,767 527,545,540 139,335,300 345,180,567

41 32 37 26 38

2 4 15 18 7

32 25 23 21 21

4 8 11 5 6

21 31 14 30 28

Montana ............................. Nebraska ............................ Nevada ................................ New Hampshire ................. New Jersey .........................

68,188,157 87,906,035 85,768,264 76,603,093 882,690,121

45 67 56 51 25

15 10 3 9 11

17 18 5 8 7

9 5 21 16 10

14 0 15 16 47

New Mexico ....................... New York ............................ North Carolina .................. North Dakota .................... Ohio ....................................

154,826,311 4,747,187,210 535,841,382 41,915,124 1,081,617,824

50 34 25 43 28

9 6 13 5 8

21 3 34 9 26

4 10 7 10 8

15 48 21 33 30

Oklahoma .......................... Oregon ................................ Pennsylvania ..................... Rhode Island ..................... South Carolina ..................

249,405,396 225,507,141 1,263,568,867 171,402,209 155,004,530

23 36 26 48 31

0 4 16 5 33

41 8 18 24 3

4 15 9 8 9

31 37 32 14 23

South Dakota ..................... Tenneessee .......................... Texas ................................... Utah .................................... Vermont .............................

30,478,987 331,623,052 935,409,657 143,302,521 80,569,398

37 42 35 30 43

10 10 10 23 1

8 27 4 7 21

10 8 10 27 10

35 14 41 14 26

Virginia .............................. Washington ........................ West Virginia ..................... Wisconsin ........................... Wyoming ............................

281,005,630 689,340,493 163,808,803 567,873,780 90,874,725

46 39 42 19 16

24 16 3 11 7

5 30 14 42 15

6 7 15 7 7

19 7 26 20 55

Dist. of Columbia .............. United States .....................

188,805,540 29,056,889,945

36 35

13 9

32 18

9 8

10 29

Source: U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families, 2004. Fiscal Year 2003 TANF Financial Data. http:/ /www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/ofs/data/tanf_2003.html. Key: (a) Includes transfers to the Child Care Development Fund (CCDF) and the Social Services Block Grant (SSBG). (b) Includes the CCDF transfer.

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U.S.-Mexico Trade: Trends and Issues By Edgar Ruiz and Sujit M. CanagaRetna One of the most crucial linkages in contemporary international relations involves the multifaceted and complex one shared between the United States and Mexico, a relationship that spans centuries and extends into myriad different arenas.

Introduction One of the most crucial linkages in contemporary international relations involves the multifaceted and complex one shared between the United States and Mexico, a relationship that spans centuries and extends into myriad different arenas. While the frequently referenced aspects of this complicated interaction include trade and agriculture, migration, border security, cooperation to combat drug trafficking, efforts to address labor, education, environment, housing, and transportation issues, personal relationships tightly unite the people of both nations. Table A provides a glimpse into several key economic and demographic indicators of the two countries.

U.S.-Mexico Trade Relationship Any reference to global trading patterns in recent decades has to mention the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) enacted over 10 years ago. This revolutionary trade agreement, clinched between Mexico, Canada and the United States and implemented on January 1, 1994, created the world’s largest free trade area involving more than 406 million people and weaving together the three countries through freer trade and investment. During this 10year period, three-way trade among the countries escalated to over $623 billion, or approximately $1.7 billion each day, more than double the pre-NAFTA level of $306 billion. Similarly, between 1994 and 2003, cumulative foreign direct investment in the three countries increased by over $1.7 trillion.1 In terms of the United States-Mexico trading relationship between 1997 and 2003, the most recent year for which data is available, American exports grew by 37 percent from $71.4 billion to $97.5 billion. In 2000, just before the American economy lapsed into recession, exports to Mexico reached a record $111.7 billion, an impressive figure indeed. In terms of relative importance of exports to Mexico, a review of data for the 1997 to 2003 reveals that from 10 percent of total U.S. exports in 1997, the proportion escalated to 13 percent in 2003. While Mexico had been

America’s second largest trading partner for a number of years, particularly in the 1997–2003 review period, Mexico’s most significant trading partner is the United States. In fact, Mexican exports to the United States grew by an outstanding 342 percent during the first 10 years of NAFTA, ballooning from $42.9 billion in 1993 to $146.8 billion in 2003. While data on global exports to Mexico are useful, a state-by-state breakdown remains an even more important statistic. Table B provides information for the five states with the highest level of exports (in monetary terms) to Mexico in the 1999 to 2003 period. In dollar terms, Texas’ $41.6 billion level reached in 2003 totally eclipsed every other state; California, in second place, stood at $14.9 billion. While almost two-thirds of the states experienced double digit growth rates in their exports to Mexico between 1999 and 2003, despite sluggish economic trends that swept across the United States in the 2001 to 2003 period, six states saw triple-digit growth levels in exports between 1999 and 2003 led by New Mexico (385 percent, $50 million to $242 million) and Maryland (222 percent, $93.4 million to $300.8 million). Further exploration into exports to Mexico indicates that the major categories are manufacturing, agricultural and livestock products and other commodities. For all three categories in 2003, Texas occupies the top spot in the dollar value of exports while California retains second place in manufacturing and other commodity exports. For agricultural and livestock product exports in 2003, Louisiana secures the second spot. Manufacturing exports to Mexico in 2003 from Texas amounted to $39.5 billion while California’s exports totaled $14.3 billion; some of the export items in this category included computers, electronic products and transportation equipment. In terms of agricultural and livestock product exports in 2003, exports to Mexico from Texas added up to $1.1 billion while Louisiana’s exports totaled $909.7 million. Other commodity exports from Texas to Mexico in 2003 amounted to $968.5 million while California’s exports involved $353.1 million. This The Council of State Governments

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Table A: United States vs. Mexico Categories

United States

Mexico

Population ...........................

290,809,777 in 2003 (U.S. Census Bureau 2003)

101,000,000 in 2002 (World Bank, World Development Report 2004)

Population growth .............

0.92% per year (2001 estimate, CIA World Fact Book)

1.5% per year (World Bank, World Development Indicators 2003)

Nominal GDP 2003 ............

$10,987.9 billion (Bureau of Economic Analysis, 2001)

$637.2 billion (World Bank, World Development Indicators 2003)

GDP per capita 2002 .........

$35,060 (World Bank, World Development Report 2004)

$5,910 (in 2001, World Bank, World Development Report 2004)

Area .....................................

3,717,792 miles

758,445.2 miles

Source: U.S. Embassy in Mexico, www.usembassy-mexico.gov.

Table B: Exports to Mexico: Top Five States, 1999–2003 (in thousands of dollars) State

1999

2000

2001

2002

2003

U.S. total ............................. Texas .................................... California ............................ Michigan ............................. Arizona ................................ Illinois ..................................

$87,044,038 37,860,871 13,559,177 2,387,992 3,250,971 1,862,070

$111,720,878 47,761,022 17,515,500 3,970,824 4,651,656 2,392,976

$101,509,075 41,647,797 16,343,059 4,790,885 3,581,323 2,260,247

$97,530,613 41,647,027 16,076,279 4,238,982 3,044,186 2,102,642

$97,457,420 41,561,359 14,871,836 4,006,426 3,229,462 2,152,722

Percent change 11% 10 10 68 -1 16

Source: International Trade Administration, U.S. Departement of Commerce.

surge in state exports to Mexico is the dominant reason for the rising number of states establishing trade, commercial and/or investment offices in Mexico; as of July 2004, 28 states had launched such offices in Mexico.2 In further examining the economic links between the United States and Mexico, the importance of the Partnership for Prosperity has to be mentioned. Launched in September 2001 by President Bush and Mexican President Vicente Fox, this is an effort to harness the resources of both the public and private sectors to create “an environment in which no Mexican feels compelled to leave his home for lack of jobs or opportunity.”3 Key measures in this effort to stimulate economic potential of people in parts of Mexico where growth has lagged and fueled immigration, include expanding and broadening access to capital, investment in small business, sharing best practices and technical expertise, building capacity for future growth, and linking institutions with shared goals. 614

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The sustainability of the U.S.-Mexico trade relationship will depend on the establishment of binational, collaborative efforts among federal, state, and local governments in both countries, as well as the private sector, to enhance economic competitiveness, especially in the maquiladora sector thru value added trade. It will also require significant public and private investments in transportation, technology, and energy infrastructure along strategic trade corridors. These two areas will play a critical role for the future economic relations between the two countries and provide the underpinnings of the U.S.-Mexico relationship in general.

Economic Competitiveness and the Need to Attract Added Value Trade The maquiladora industry is among the most visible aspects of the U.S.-Mexico trade relationship, especially along the 2,000-mile border shared by the two nations. Maquiladoras are manufacturing plants

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INTERNATIONAL TRADE that process and assemble components imported into Mexico that are, in turn, exported, usually to the United States.4 The industry uses relatively inexpensive Mexican labor to perform a range of manufacturing operations including assembly and processing. While the establishment of the maquiladora industry pre-dates the implementation of NAFTA, the industry has grown significantly since its enactment. The maquiladora industry currently is the second largest source of export earnings in Mexico, and comprises a large sector of the U.S.-Mexico trade.5 Today more than 3,000 maquiladora plants throughout the country employ more than 1 million workers. More than 2,000 of these plants are located in the border region. The industry is a leader in technology development, one of the main industrial engines for Mexico, one of the country’s main employers, and one of the pillars for Mexican economic development.6 Moreover, the maquiladora industry is very dependent on U.S. suppliers, thereby supporting American jobs outside the border region. Recent global competition and outsourcing however, has impacted this sector. The maquiladora industry lost approximately 277,000 jobs between October 2000 and March 2002, with 187 plants closing or significantly downsizing since 2000.7 Nearly a fifth of the factories fled to lower-cost locales in Central America, Southeast Asia and China.8 In the U.S.-Mexico border region, where manufacturing and trade are so vital and is the foundation of the economy, such plant closures and employment loses can be devastating. In an effort to ameliorate these job losses and investment, states and local governments on both sides of the border are jointly working to develop strategies to enhance the border region’s economic competitiveness. Among the goals is to develop and coordinate policies and alliances between federal, state and local governments in the United States and Mexico. The Border Legislative Conference (BLC), a binational program of The Council of State Governments’ western and southern regions, recently adopted recommendations to promote value added trade and for the creation of a seamless border that integrates the concepts of “secure, fast and smart” to expedite the crossing of legitimate people and commerce. The concept of “smart” is the utilization of broadband technology and state of the art business practices that permeate the region and the business community to reduce the cost of doing business. A survey conducted by the College of the Northern Border (COLEF in Spanish) during the peak of the recent maquiladora crisis revealed that plants with

the simplest production practices, such as factories involved in textile, clothing, and furniture manufacturing, were among the first to leave. The continued exodus of industries in these sectors to lower-cost countries such as China have made it clear that Mexico can no longer compete on the basis of cheap labor.9 The Mexican state of Baja California took steps to ensure the survival of its maquiladora operations by diversifying economic activity and focusing on attracting higher-grade manufacturing sectors less vulnerable to wage competition with other countries such as electronics, automotive and auto parts, aerospace, and medical products. The plants with the most sophisticated, most costly and highest value-added procedures weathered the economic crisis best.10 Most recently, in the city of Mexicali, Baja California’s capital, Mexican officials and U.S. investors announced plans to attract computer chip companies to build multibillion dollar factories at an industrial park instead of exporting production to Asia.11 Mexico’s proximity to the United States, the world’s largest consumer market, gives it a unique advantage over other countries. Its location is “ideal for designing and producing items for which proximity to the end user matters.”12 The maquiladora industry’s long term prosperity, experts say, will depend on Mexico’s ability to capitalize on this advantage with rapid-fire turn around that Asia and other countries can’t match, while moving up the value chain to produce more complex products that aren’t as dependent on rock-bottom factory wages.13 While the contribution of the maquiladora industry to the overall Mexican economy remains crucial, the role of the non-maquiladora investments remains substantially larger.14 In fact, less than 15 percent of the $170 billion in foreign direct investment that flowed into Mexico since NAFTA involved maquiladora operations. In sum, both the maquiladora and non-maquiladora operations coalesced to significantly expand Mexico’s economic potential by creating jobs, boosting competition and productivity, lowering prices, and expanding consumer choice.

Infrastructure and Trade Corridors As the U.S. and Mexican economies further integrate and trade between the two countries flourishes, there will be a continual increase in commercial vehicular traffic at U.S.-Mexico ports of entry, as well as in interior highways in both countries. Given that The Council of State Governments

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INTERNATIONAL TRADE most U.S.-Mexico trade moves across land via commercial vehicles, policy-makers at every level of government have to enact measures to accommodate these burgeoning trade volumes. In Texas alone, 23 international crossings serve as overland ports of entry for trade with Mexico. The state’s ports of entry handle approximately 80 percent of U.S.-Mexico overland trade, of which 90 percent moves via commercial vehicle over NAFTA corridors that originate and end in the United States and Mexico. This percentage is not expected to change anytime in the foreseeable future. Rather the number of commercial vehicle crossings will grow exponentially over the next 10 to 15 years, creating choke points for trade.15 Commercial vehicles operating in the border region usually face long waits associated with government inspections, customs processing and increasingly, lack of adequate infrastructure at inspection facilities. These factors increase traffic congestion that impede commercial and non-commercial traffic in border communities and land border ports of entry, and have significant environmental impacts. Additionally, many state and local roads and highways leading to and from border ports of entry are not adequate to meet the growing demands of increased cross-border trade. The increase in United States and Mexico over the last 10 years has not been matched by an increase in infrastructure investments by both countries. Since the enactment of NAFTA in 1994, state and local governments have provided much of the necessary infrastructure to facilitate the growing cross-border trade with limited federal support. According to the North American Development Bank (NADBank), a binational institution established under the auspices of NAFTA to finance environmental infrastructure projects, Mexico needs to invest $25 billion annually to meet their infrastructure needs. In addition, the U.S. Government Accountability Office’s congressional report of March 2000 on U.S.-Mexico border infrastructure, concluded that despite the overall U.S.-Mexico policy for achieving closer economic integration, no clear strategy existed to ensure that the infrastructure and processes are in place to support such objective. As a response to the growing coordination needs, in March 2002, Presidents Bush and Fox signed a 22-point smart border accord that focuses on secure infrastructure and the secure flow of people and goods. Among other things, the plan calls for long term planning, relief of bottlenecks, harmonization of ports of entry operations, financing, and electronic exchange of information. This action plan exempli616

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fies the strategic partnerships developed by both countries and provides a conceptual framework and commitment of resources among both federal governments to improve cross-border infrastructure, as well as direction for state and local governments. For their part, states on both side of the border have developed corridor strategies to facilitate national and international movement of goods, services, people and information. Among them is the joint effort by the U.S. states of Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Idaho and Montana to develop the CANAMEX Corridor Project. The CANAMEX Corridor Project extends from central Mexico to Alberta, Canada and focuses on the promotion of tourism, communications, key infrastructure investments, and the streamlining of international clearance at land border ports of entry. Similarly, the state of Texas has been working on the ongoing development of the Trans-Texas Corridor concept along Interstates 69 and 35 that would create a transportation and multi-modal system of more than 4,000 miles. The system would include toll roads, commercial vehicle lanes, rail lines, high speed rail and other services. In the Mexican state of Nuevo Leon, home to the industrial city of Monterrey, the state is investing in the International Corridor for Border Security that connects from Monterrey to the Columbia port of entry along the Texas border, which provides access to U.S. markets. The corridor plans include plants for secure exportation that will have closed circuit, pavement, lighting, and secure entrances and exits. These efforts will not only increasing cross-border efficiency, but also to assist in both nations’ efforts to combat terrorism by reducing the possibilities of contamination commercial vehicles with illegal substances or hazardous materials. Local and regional governments have also been proactive in the development of regional strategies to address cross-border infrastructure needs. The San Diego Association of Governments has been working closely with officials in the neighboring City of Tijuana to develop cross-border plans that promote regional planning, identify of regional priorities, and jointly seek funding opportunities. Similar efforts have been established in El Paso, Texas—Ciudad Juarez, Chihuahua, and in the Laredo, Texas and Nuevo Laredo, Tamaulipas regions.

Conclusion In conclusion, the U.S.-Mexico relationship spans so many different spheres though it could be argued that the trade relationship attracts the most attention

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INTERNATIONAL TRADE given the sheer economic capacities involved. For this relationship to flourish, the active involvement of policy-makers at every level of government in both countries remains critical. To this end, programs such as the BLC perform a valuable function as they bring together policy-makers to resolve the challenges of today and prepare for the tests of tomorrow. Policymakers can then debate and devise strategies that encourage the transition to higher-value-added operations, identify and tap into the comparative advantage of both countries, and forge ahead with reforms and infrastructure investments that create more competition, entrepreneurship, and flexibility in an ever increasing global economy.

PowerPoint Presentation, BLC meeting, Monterrey, Nuevo León, June 11, 2004. 7 See note 5 above. 8 “The Maquiladora Roars Back,” The San Diego Union Tribune, June 29, 2004. 9 “Chip Factories Envisioned for South of Border,” The Los Angeles Times, Business Section, July 15, 2004. 10 See note 8 above. 11 See note 9 above. 12 “Beyond Cheap Labor: Lessons for Developing Economies,” The McKinsey Quarterly no. 1, 2005. 13 See note 9 above. 14 See note 12 above. 15 See note 5 above.

About the Authors Notes 1 Information related to the impact of NAFTA since its inception a decade ago is extracted from Ambassador Robert B. Zoellick, United States Trade Representative, “NAFTA Free Trade Commission Joint Statement—A Decade of Achievement,” July 16, 2004 and “NAFTA Highlights,” U.S. Embassy in Mexico, www.usembassymexico.gov. 2 Information provided by Chris Whatley, The Council of State Governments, DC Office. 3 “U.S. and Mexico at a Glance,” U.S. Embassy in Mexico, www.usembassy-mexico.gov. 4 “The Maquiladora Industry,” Made in Mexico Inc., www.madeinmexicoinc.com. 5 Texas State Sen. Eliot Shapleigh, “Border 2020: Secure, Fast, Smart,” Report presented to the Border Legislative Conference on July 9, 2004. 6 Asociación de Maquiladoras de Nuevo León, A.C,

Edgar Ruiz is the program director of the Border Legislative Conference in CSG’s Western Regional Office. Prior to joining CSG in 2001, he served as management analyst in the Community Development Department of the city of Lake Forest, CA, and as legislative staff for then-Assemblywoman (now state Senator) Denise Moreno Ducheny in the California Legislature. He holds a Masters degree in Public Administration and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from State Diego State University. Sujit M. CanagaRetna is currently the senior fiscal analyst at The Council of State Governments’ Southern Office, the Southern Legislative Conference (SLC), where he has been since March 1998. He is responsible for tracking fiscal, economic development and transportation trends for CSG and SLC. CanagaRetna has a Bachelor of Arts degree from Bennington College, Vermont and graduate degrees (MIA/ MPA) in International Affairs and Public Administration from Columbia University. Prior to joining CSG/SLC, CanagaRetna worked for the New York City Comptroller’s Office.

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Table 10.1 OFFICIAL NAMES OF STATES AND JURISDICTIONS, CAPITALS, ZIP CODES AND CENTRAL SWITCHBOARDS State or other jurisdiction

Name of state capitol (a)

Capital

Zip code

Area code

Central switchboard

Alabama, State of ...................................... Alaska, State of .......................................... Arizona, State of ........................................ Arkansas, State of ..................................... California, State of ....................................

State House State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol

Montgomery Juneau Phoenix Little Rock Sacramento

36130 99801 85007 72201 95814

334 907 602 501 916

242-7100 465-4648 542-4900 682-3000 657-9900

Colorado, State of ..................................... Connecticut, State of ................................. Delaware, State of ..................................... Florida, State of ......................................... Georgia, State of ........................................

State Capitol State Capitol Legislative Hall The Capitol State Capitol

Denver Hartford Dover Tallahassee Atlanta

80203 06106 19903 32399 30334

303 860 302 850 404

866-5000 240-0100 739-4114 488-4441 656-2000

Hawaii, State of ......................................... Idaho, State of ............................................ Illinois, State of .......................................... Indiana, State of ........................................ Iowa, State of .............................................

State Capitol State Capitol State House State House State Capitol

Honolulu Boise Springfield Indianapolis Des Moines

96813 83720 62706 46204 50319

808 208 217 317 515

587-0221 332-1000 782-2000 232-1000 281-5011

Kansas, State of ......................................... Kentucky, Commonwealth of ................... Louisiana, State of ..................................... Maine, State of ........................................... Maryland, State of ....................................

Statehouse State Capitol State Capitol State House Station State House

Topeka Frankfort Baton Rouge Augusta Annapolis

66612 40601 70804 04333 21401

785 502 225 207 410

296-0111 564-3317 342-4479 287-6826 946-5400

Massachusetts, Commonwealth of ........... Michigan, State of ..................................... Minnesota, State of ................................... Mississippi, State of .................................. Missouri, State of ......................................

State House State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol

Boston Lansing St. Paul Jackson Jefferson City

02133 48909 55155 39215 65101

617 517 651 601 573

722-2000 373-0184 296-3962 359-3770 751-2000

Montana, State of ...................................... Nebraska, State of ..................................... Nevada, State of ......................................... New Hampshire, State of .......................... New Jersey, State of ..................................

State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State House State House

Helena Lincoln Carson City Concord Trenton

59620 68509 89701 03301 08625

406 402 775 603 609

444-3111 471-2311 684-5670 271-1110 292-6000

New Mexico, State of ................................ New York, State of ..................................... North Carolina, State of ........................... North Dakota, State of .............................. Ohio, State of .............................................

State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol Statehouse

Santa Fe Albany Raleigh Bismarck Columbus

87501 12224 27601 58505 43215

505 518 919 701 614

986-4600 474-8390 733-4111 328-2000 466-2000

Oklahoma, State of ................................... Oregon, State of ......................................... Pennsylvania, Commonwealth of ............. Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, State of ................................ South Carolina, State of ...........................

State Capitol State Capitol Main Capitol Building

Oklahoma City Salem Harrisburg

73105 97310 17120

405 503 717

521-2011 986-1848 787-2121

State House State House

Providence Columbia

02903 29211

401 803

222-2653 212-6200

South Dakota, State of .............................. Tennessee, State of .................................... Texas, State of ............................................ Utah, State of ............................................. Vermont, State of .......................................

State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol State House

Pierre Nashville Austin Salt Lake City Montpelier

57501 37243 78701 84114 05633

605 615 512 801 802

773-3011 741-2001 463-4630 538-3000 828-2231

Virginia, Commonwealth of ..................... Washington, State of ................................. West Virginia, State of .............................. Wisconsin, State of .................................... Wyoming, State of .....................................

State Capitol Legislative Building State Capitol State Capitol State Capitol

Richmond Olympia Charleston Madison Cheyenne

23219 98504 25305 53702 82002

804 360 304 608 307

698-7410 635-9993 558-3456 266-0382 777-7220

District of Columbia ................................. American Samoa, Territory of ................. Guam, Territory of ..................................... No. Mariana Islands, Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, Commonwealth of ...............

District Building Maota Fono Congress Building Civic Center Building The Capitol

... Pago Pago Hagatna Saipan San Juan

20004 96799 96910 96950 00902

202 684 671 670 787

724-8000 633-4116 472-8931 664-0992 721-7000

U.S. Virgin Islands, Territory of ..............

Capitol Building

Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas

00804

340

774-0880

(a) In some instances the name is not official.

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Table 10.2 HISTORICAL DATA ON THE STATES State or other jurisdiction

Date organized as territory

Source of state lands

Date admitted to Union

Alabama .............................. Alaska .................................. Arizona ................................ Arkansas ............................. California ............................

Mississippi Territory, 1798 (a) Purchased from Russia, 1867 Ceded by Mexico, 1848 (b) Louisiana Purchase, 1803 Ceded by Mexico, 1848

March 3, 1817 Aug. 24, 1912 Feb. 24, 1863 March 2, 1819 (c)

Dec. 14, 1819 Jan. 3, 1959 Feb. 14, 1912 June 15, 1836 Sept. 9, 1850

22 49 48 25 31

Colorado ............................. Connecticut .........................

Louisiana Purchase, 1803 (d) Fundamental Orders, Jan. 14, 1638; Royal charter, April 23, 1662 Swedish charter, 1638; English charter, 1638 Ceded by Spain, 1819 Charter, 1732, from George II to Trustees for Establishing the Colony of Georgia

Feb. 28, 1861 (e)

Aug. 1, 1876 Jan. 9, 1788 (f)

38 5

(e) March 30, 1822 (e)

Dec. 7, 1787 (f) March 3, 1845 Jan. 2, 1788 (f)

1 27 4

Delaware ............................. Florida ................................. Georgia ................................ Hawaii ................................. Idaho .................................... Illinois .................................. Indiana ................................ Iowa .....................................

Annexed, 1898 Treaty with Britain, 1846 Northwest Territory, 1787 Northwest Territory, 1787 Louisiana Purchase, 1803

June 14, 1900 March 4, 1863 Feb. 3, 1809 May 7, 1800 June 12, 1838

Aug. 21, 1959 July 3, 1890 Dec. 3, 1818 Dec. 11, 1816 Dec. 28, 1846

50 43 21 19 29

Kansas ................................. Kentucky ............................. Louisiana ............................ Maine ................................... Maryland ............................

Louisiana Purchase, 1803 (d) Part of Virginia until admitted as state Louisiana Purchase, 1803 (g) Part of Massachusetts until admitted as state Charter, 1632, from Charles I to Calvert

May 30, 1854 (c) March 26, 1804 (c) (e)

Jan. 29, 1861 June 1, 1792 April 30, 1812 March 15, 1820 April 28, 1788 (f)

34 15 18 23 7

Massachusetts .................... Michigan ............................. Minnesota ........................... Mississippi .......................... Missouri ..............................

Charter to Massachusetts Bay Company, 1629 Northwest Territory, 1787 Northwest Territory, 1787 (h) Mississippi Territory (i) Louisiana Purchase, 1803

(e) Jan. 11, 1805 March 3, 1849 April 7, 1798 June 4, 1812

Feb. 6, 1788 (f) Jan. 26, 1837 May 11, 1858 Dec. 10, 1817 Aug. 10, 1821

6 26 32 20 24

Montana .............................. Nebraska ............................. Nevada ................................. New Hampshire ..................

May 26, 1864 May 30, 1854 March 2, 1861 (e)

Nov. 8, 1889 March 1, 1867 Oct. 31, 1864 June 21, 1788 (f)

41 37 36 9

New Jersey ..........................

Louisiana Purchase, 1803 (j) Louisiana Purchase, 1803 Ceded by Mexico, 1848 Grants from Council for New England, 1622 and 1629; made Royal province, 1679 Dutch settlement, 1618; English charter, 1664

(e)

Dec. 18, 1787 (f)

3

New Mexico ........................ New York ............................. North Carolina ................... North Dakota ..................... Ohio .....................................

Ceded by Mexico, 1848 (b) Dutch settlement, 1623; English control, 1664 Charter, 1663, from Charles II Louisiana Purchase, 1803 (k) Northwest Territory, 1787

Sept. 9, 1850 (e) (e) March 2, 1861 May 7, 1800

Jan. 6, 1912 July 26, 1788 (f) Nov. 21, 1789 (f) Nov. 2, 1889 March 1, 1803

47 11 12 39 17

Oklahoma ........................... Oregon ................................. Pennsylvania ...................... Rhode Island ...................... South Carolina ...................

Louisiana Purchase, 1803 Settlement and treaty with Britain, 1846 Grant from Charles II to William Penn, 1681 Charter, 1663, from Charles II Charter, 1663, from Charles II

May 2, 1890 Aug. 14, 1848 (e) (e) (e)

Nov. 16, 1907 Feb. 14, 1859 Dec. 12, 1787 (f) May 29, 1790 (f) May 23, 1788 (f)

46 33 2 13 8

South Dakota ...................... Tennessee ............................

March 2, 1861 June 8, 1790 (l)

Nov. 2, 1889 June 1, 1796

40 16

Texas .................................... Utah ..................................... Vermont ..............................

Louisiana Purchase, 1803 Part of North Carolina until land ceded to U.S. in 1789 Republic of Texas, 1845 Ceded by Mexico, 1848 From lands of New Hampshire and New York

(c) Sept. 9, 1850 (c)

Dec. 29, 1845 Jan. 4, 1896 March 4, 1791

28 45 14

Virginia ............................... Washington ......................... West Virginia ...................... Wisconsin ............................ Wyoming .............................

Charter, 1609, from James I to London Company Oregon Territory, 1848 Part of Virginia until admitted as state Northwest Territory, 1787 Louisiana Purchase, 1803 (d)(j)

(e) March 2, 1853 (c) April 20, 1836 July 25, 1868

June 25, 1788 (f) Nov. 11, 1889 June 20, 1863 May 29, 1848 July 10, 1890

10 42 35 30 44

Dist. of Columbia ............... American Samoa ................ Guam ................................... No. Mariana Islands .......... Puerto Rico .........................

Maryland (m)

...

...

... ... July 25, 1952 (n)

... ... ...

Ceded by Spain, 1898 ... Ceded by Spain, 1898

U.S. Virgin Islands .............

... Became a territory, 1900 Aug. 1, 1950 March 24, 1976 ... Purchased from Denmark, March 31, 1917

See footnotes at end of table.

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HISTORICAL DATA ON THE STATES — Continued Key: (a) By the Treaty of Paris, 1783, England gave up claim to the 13 original Colonies, and to all land within an area extending along the present Canadian to the Lake of the Woods, down the Mississippi River to the 31st parallel, east to the Chattahoochee, down that river to the mouth of the Flint, border east to the source of the St. Mary’s down that river to the ocean. The major part of Alabama was acquired by the Treaty of Paris, and the lower portion from Spain in 1813. (b) Portion of land obtained by Gadsden Purchase, 1853. (c) No territorial status before admission to Union. (d) Portion of land ceded by Mexico, 1848. (e) One of the original 13 Colonies. (f) Date of ratification of U.S. Constitution. (g) West Feliciana District (Baton Rouge) acquired from Spain, 1810; added to Louisiana, 1812.

(h) Portion of land obtained by Louisiana Purchase, 1803. (i) See footnote (a). The lower portion of Mississippi also was acquired from Spain in 1813. (j) Portion of land obtained from Oregon Territory, 1848. (k) The northern portion of the Red River Valley was acquired by treaty with Great Britain in 1818. (l) Date Southwest Territory (identical boundary as Tennessee’s) was created. (m) Area was originally 100 square miles, taken from Virginia and Maryland. Virginia’s portion south of the Potomac was given back to that state in 1846. Site chosen in 1790, city incorporated 1802. (n) On this date, Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth by compact approved by the U.S. Congress and the voters of Puerto Rico as provided in U.S. Public Law 600 of 1950.

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103,718 4,845 1,954 53,927 57,906 6,423 82,747 55,584 35,867 55,869 81,815 39,728 43,562 30,862 9,774 7,840 56,804 79,610 46,907 68,886 145,552 76,872 109,826 8,968 7,417 121,356 47,214 48,711 68,976 40,948 68,667 95,997 44,817 1,045 30,110

Colorado ......................... Connecticut ..................... Delaware ......................... Florida ............................. Georgia ............................

Hawaii ............................. Idaho ................................ Illinois .............................. Indiana ............................ Iowa .................................

Kansas ............................. Kentucky ......................... Louisiana ........................ Maine ............................... Maryland ........................

Massachusetts ................ Michigan ......................... Minnesota ....................... Mississippi ...................... Missouri ..........................

Montana .......................... Nebraska ......................... Nevada ............................. New Hampshire .............. New Jersey ......................

New Mexico .................... New York ......................... North Carolina ............... North Dakota ................. Ohio .................................

Oklahoma ....................... Oregon ............................. Pennsylvania .................. Rhode Island .................. South Carolina ...............

See footnotes at end of table.

50,744 571,951 113,635 52,068 155,959

Alabama .......................... Alaska .............................. Arizona ............................ Arkansas ......................... California ........................

19 10 32 50 40

5 30 29 17 35

4 15 7 44 46

45 22 14 31 18

13 36 33 39 42

47 11 24 38 23

8 48 49 26 21

28 1 6 27 3

Rank in nation

Land area In square miles

State or other jurisdiction

Table 10.3 STATE STATISTICS

3,511,532 3,559,596 12,365,455 1,076,164 4,147,152

1,874,614 19,190,115 8,407,248 633,837 11,435,798

917,621 1,739,291 2,241,154 1,287,687 8,638,396

6,433,422 10,079,985 5,059,375 2,881,281 5,704,484

2,723,507 4,117,827 4,496,334 1,305,728 5,508,909

1,257,608 1,366,332 12,653,544 6,195,643 2,944,062

4,550,688 3,483,372 817,491 17,019,068 8,684,715

4,500,752 648,818 5,580,811 2,725,714 35,484,453

Size

28 27 6 43 25

36 3 11 48 7

44 38 35 41 10

13 8 21 31 17

33 26 24 40 19

42 39 5 14 30

22 29 45 4 9

23 47 18 32 1

Rank in nation

Population

0.6 1.1 0.3 0.7 1.1

1.2 0.3 1.2 0.0 0.2

0.8 0.7 3.4 1.0 0.7

0.2 0.4 0.7 0.5 0.6

0.4 0.7 0.7 0.8 1.1

1.4 1.7 0.5 0.6 0.3

1.1 0.7 1.4 2.0 1.6

0.5 1.1 2.6 0.7 1.4

Percentage change 2002 to 2003

51.1 37.1 275.9 1,029.8 137.7

15.4 406.4 172.6 9.2 279.3

6.3 22.6 20.4 143.6 1,164.7

820.6 177.5 63.6 61.4 82.8

33.3 103.7 103.2 42.3 563.6

195.8 16.5 227.6 172.7 52.7

43.9 719.0 418.4 315.6 150.0

88.7 1.1 49.1 52.3 227.5

Density per square mile

5 5 19 2 6

3 29 13 1 18

1 3 3 2 13

10 15 8 4 9

4 6 7 2 8

2 2 19 9 5

7 5 1 25 13

7 1 8 4 53

No. of Representatives in Congress

Oklahoma City Salem Harrisburg Providence Columbia

Santa Fe Albany Raleigh Bismarck Columbus

Helena Lincoln Carson City Concord Trenton

Boston Lansing St. Paul Jackson Jefferson City

Topeka Frankfort Baton Rouge Augusta Annapolis

Honolulu Boise Springfield Indianapolis Des Moines

Denver Hartford Dover Tallahassee Atlanta

Montgomery Juneau Phoenix Little Rock Sacramento

Capital

519,034 140,977 48,950 175,901 117,394

62,203 95,658 306,944 55,532 725,228

25,780 232,362 52,457 40,687 85,403

589,281 118,588 284,037 180,881 39,636

122,103 27,660 225,702 18,560 35,838

378,155 189,847 111,834 783,612 198,076

560,415 124,558 32,135 155,171 424,868

201,425 30,711 1,371,960 184,055 435,245

Population

1 3 13 1 1

3 6 2 2 1

6 2 6 3 9

1 6 2 1 15

4 7 2 9 7

1 1 6 1 1

1 3 2 8 1

2 2 1 1 7

Rank in state Largest city

Oklahoma City Portland Philadelphia Providence Columbia

Albuquerque New York City Charlotte Fargo Columbus

Billings Omaha Las Vegas Manchester Newark

Boston Detroit Minneapolis Jackson Kansas City

519,034 539,438 1,492,231 175,901 117,394

463,874 8,084,316 580,597 90,599 725,228

89,847 399,357 508,604 108,398 277,000

589,281 925,051 375,635 180,881 443,471

355,126 693,604 473,681 64,249 638,614

378,155 189,847 2,886,251 783,612 198,076

560,415 140,104 72,664 762,461 424,868

239,416 268,983 1,371,960 184,055 3,798,981

Population

Wichita Louisville-Jefferson (b) New Orleans Portland Baltimore

Honolulu Boise Chicago Indianapolis Des Moines

Denver Bridgeport Wilmington Jacksonville Atlanta

Birmingham Anchorage Phoenix Little Rock Los Angeles

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75,885 41,217 261,797 82,144 9,250 39,594 66,544 24,078 54,310 97,100 63 77 210 181 3,427 134

South Dakota .................. Tennessee ........................ Texas ................................ Utah ................................. Vermont .......................... Virginia ........................... Washington ..................... West Virginia .................. Wisconsin ........................ Wyoming ......................... District of Columbia ...... American Samoa (d) ..... Guam (d) ......................... No. Mariana Islands (d) Puerto Rico ..................... U.S. Virgin Islands (d) .. 16 34 2 12 43 37 20 41 25 9 ... ... ... ... ... ...

Rank in nation 764,309 5,841,748 22,118,509 2,351,467 619,107 7,386,330 6,131,445 1,810,354 5,472,299 501,242 563,384 57,291 154,805 69,221 3,878,523 108,612

Size 46 16 2 34 49 12 15 37 20 51 50 ... ... ... ... ...

Rank in nation

Population

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, July 2003. Key: . . . — Not applicable (a) Delegate with privileges to vote in committees and the Committee of the Whole.

In square miles

State or other jurisdiction

Land area

STATE STATISTICS — Continued

0.5 0.9 1.8 1.4 0.4 1.4 1.1 0.3 0.6 0.5 -1.0 22.0 ... ... 0.5 ...

Percentage change 2002 to 2003 1 9 32 3 1 11 9 3 8 1 1 (a) 1 (a) 1 (a) ... 1 (a) 1 (a)

No. of Representatives in Congress Population

Pierre 13,876 Nashville 545,915 (c) Austin 671,873 Salt Lake City 181,266 Montpelier 8,035 Richmond 197,456 Olympia 42,514 Charleston 53,421 Madison 215,211 Cheyenne 53,011 ... ... Pago Pago 4,278 Hagatna 1,100 Saipan 62,392 San Juan 421,958 Charlotte Amalie, 11,004 St. Thomas

Capital 7 2 4 1 13 4 18 1 2 1 ... 3 18 1 1 1

Rank in state Largest city Sioux Falls Memphis Houston Salt Lake City Burlington Virginia Beach Seattle Charleston Milwaukee Cheyenne ... Tafuna Dededo Saipan San Juan Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas

130,491 648,882 2,009,834 181,266 38,889 433,934 570,898 53,421 590,895 53,011 ... 8,409 42,980 62,392 421,958 11,004

Population

(b) Coextensive with Jefferson County. (c) This city is part of a consolidated city-county government and is coextensive with Davidson County. (d) Information for territories and cities with a population under 100,000 is from the U.S. Census Bureau, Census 2000.

10.1 141.7 84.5 28.6 66.9 186.6 92.1 75.2 100.8 5.2 8,942.6 ... ... ... 1,131.8 ...

Density per square mile

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Alabama

Arizona

Nickname ...................................................................... The Heart of Dixie Motto ....................................................... Aldemus Jura Nostra Defendere (We Dare Defend Our Rights) Flower ........................................................................................... Camellia Bird ..................................................................................... Yellowhammer Tree .................................................................... Southern (Longleaf) Pine Song ............................................................................................. Alabama Entered the Union ....................................................... December 14, 1819 Capital .................................................................................... Montgomery

Nickname ............................................................ The Grand Canyon State Motto ............................................................... Ditat Deus (God Enriches) Flower ...................................................... Blossom of the Saguaro Cactus Bird ......................................................................................... Cactus Wren Tree ............................................................................................ Palo Verde Songs .................................................... Arizona March Song and Arizona Entered the Union ......................................................... February 14, 1912 Capital ............................................................................................ Phoenix

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ............................................................... 113,635 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 6th Population .................................................................................... 5,580,811 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 18th Density per square mile ............................................................... 49.1 Capital City .................................................................................... Phoenix Population ........................................................................... 1,371,960 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ................................................................................... Phoenix Number Representatives in Congress ...................................................... 8 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 15 Number of Municipal Governments ....................................................... 87 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 10 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 410 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 305

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 50,744 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 28th Population ................................................................................... 4,500,752 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 23rd Density per square mile ............................................................... 88.7 Capital City ............................................................................ Montgomery Population .............................................................................. 201,425 Rank in State .................................................................................. 2nd Largest City ............................................................................ Birmingham Population .............................................................................. 239,416 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 7 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 67 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 451 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 9 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 128 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 525

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ........................................ http://www.alabama.gov Governor’s Website ................................. http://www.governor.state.al.us State Legislative Website ..................... http://www.legislature.state.al.us State Judicial Website ............................... http://www.judicial.state.al.us

Alaska Nickname ........................................................................ The Last Frontier Motto ............................................................................ North to the Future Flower ................................................................................. Forget-Me-Not Bird ................................................................................ Willow Ptarmigan Tree ......................................................................................... Sitka Spruce Song ...................................................................................... Alaska’s Flag Entered the Union .............................................................. January 3, 1959 Capital .............................................................................................. Juneau

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) .............................................................. 571,951 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 1st Population ...................................................................................... 648,818 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 47th Density per square mile ................................................................. 1.1 Capital City ...................................................................................... Juneau Population ................................................................................. 31,283 Rank in State .................................................................................. 2nd Largest City ............................................................................... Anchorage Population .............................................................................. 268,983 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 1 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 27 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 149 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 3 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 53 Number of Special Districts ................................................................... 14

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.ak.us Governor’s Website ......................................... http://www.gov.state.ak.us State Legislative Website .............................. http://www.legis.state.ak.us State Judicial Website ................................. http://www.state.ak.us/courts

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STATISTICS

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website .................................................. http://www.az.gov Governor’s Website ................................ http://www.governor.state.az.us State Legislative Website ............................. http://www.azleg.state.az.us State Judicial Website ............................. http://www.supreme.state.az.us

Arkansas Nickname ........................................................................ The Natural State Motto .................................................. Regnat Populus (The People Rule) Flower ................................................................................ Apple Blossom Bird ........................................................................................ Mockingbird Tree ....................................................................................................... Pine Song .............................................................................................. Arkansas Entered the Union ................................................................ June 15, 1836 Capital ....................................................................................... Little Rock

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 52,068 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 27th Population ................................................................................... 2,725,714 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 32nd Density per square mile ............................................................... 52.3 Capital City ............................................................................... Little Rock Population .............................................................................. 184,055 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City .............................................................................. Little Rock Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 4 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 75 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 499 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 6 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 310 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 704

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.ar.us Governor’s Website ................................. http://www.state.ar.us/governor State Legislative Website ............................ http://www.arkleg.state.ar.us State Judicial Website ........................................... http://courts.state.ar.us

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California

Connecticut

Nickname ........................................................................ The Golden State Motto .................................................................. Eureka (I Have Found It) Flower .................................................................................. Golden Poppy Bird ....................................................................... California Valley Quail Tree ............................................................................ California Redwood Song ........................................................................ I Love You, California Entered the Union ......................................................... September 9, 1850 Capital ...................................................................................... Sacramento

Nickname ................................................................ The Constitution State Motto ...................................................................... Qui Transtulit Sustinet (He Who Transplanted Still Sustains) Flower .............................................................................. Mountain Laurel Bird ................................................................................... American Robin Tree ............................................................................................ White Oak Song .................................................................................... Yankee Doodle Entered the Union .............................................................. January 9, 1788 Capital ............................................................................................ Hartford

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) .............................................................. 155,959 Rank in Nation ............................................................................... 3rd Population ................................................................................. 35,484,453 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 1st Density per Square Mile ............................................................ 227.5 Capital City .............................................................................. Sacramento Population .............................................................................. 435,245 Rank in State ................................................................................... 7th Largest City ............................................................................ Los Angeles Population ........................................................................... 3,728,981 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 53 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 58 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 475 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 55 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 985 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 2,830

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website .................................................. http://www.ca.gov Governor’s Website ....................................... http://www.governor.ca.gov State Legislative Website ................................. http://www.leginfo.ca.gov State Judicial Website .................................. http://www.courtinfo.ca.gov

Colorado Nickname .................................................................. The Centennial State Motto ................................................................................. Nil Sine Numine (Nothing Without Providence) Flower ........................................................................................ Columbine Bird ........................................................................................ Lark Bunting Tree .......................................................................................... Blue Spruce Song ............................................................. Where the Columbines Grow Entered the Union ............................................................... August 1, 1876 Capital .............................................................................................. Denver

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................... 4,845 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 48th Population ................................................................................... 3,483,372 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 29th Density per square mile ............................................................. 719.0 Capital City .................................................................................... Hartford Population .............................................................................. 124,558 Rank in State .................................................................................. 3rd Largest City ............................................................................... Bridgeport Population .............................................................................. 140,104 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 5 Number of Counties .................................................................................. 8 Number of Municipal Governments ....................................................... 30 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 7 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 166 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 384

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.ct.us Governor’s Website ................................. http://www.state.ct.us/governor State Legislative Website ................................. http://www.cga.state.ct.us State Judicial Website ....................................... http://www.jud.state.ct.us

Delaware Nickname ............................................................................ The First State Motto ................................................................. Liberty and Independence Flower ................................................................................. Peach Blossom Bird ............................................................................... Blue Hen Chicken Tree ................................................................................... American Holly Song ..................................................................................... Our Delaware Entered the Union ........................................................ December 7, 1787 Capital ................................................................................................ Dover

STATISTICS

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) .............................................................. 103,718 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 8th Population ................................................................................... 4,550,688 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 22nd Density per square mile ............................................................... 43.9 Capital City ...................................................................................... Denver Population .............................................................................. 560,415 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ..................................................................................... Denver Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 7 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 63 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 270 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 9 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 176 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 1,414

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................... 1,954 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 49th Population ...................................................................................... 817,491 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 45th Density per square mile ..................................................................... 418.4 Capital City ........................................................................................ Dover Population ................................................................................. 32,581 Rank in State .................................................................................. 2nd Largest City ............................................................................. Wilmington Population ................................................................................. 73,135 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 1 Number of Counties .................................................................................. 3 Number of Municipal Governments ....................................................... 57 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 3 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 19 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 260

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.co.us Governor’s Website...http://www.state.co.us/gov_dir/governor_office.html State Legislative Website ................................. http://www.leg.state.co.us State Judicial Website ................................. http://www.courts.state.co.us

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ................................................. http://delaware.gov Governor’s Website ................................ http://www.state.de.us/governor State Legislative Website .............................. http://www.legis.state.de.us State Judicial Website .......................................... http://courts.state.de.us

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Florida

Hawaii

Nickname ..................................................................... The Sunshine State Motto ................................................................................. In God We Trust Flower .............................................................................. Orange Blossom Bird ........................................................................................ Mockingbird Tree ........................................................................... Sabal Palmetto Palm Song .......................................... The Swannee River (Old Folks at Home) Entered the Union ................................................................ March 3, 1845 Capital ....................................................................................... Tallahassee

Nickname .......................................................................... The Aloha State Motto .............................................. Ua Mau Ke Ea O Ka Aina I Ka Pono (The Life of the Land Is Perpetuated in Righteousness) Flower ................................................................... Native Yellow Hibiscus Bird ...................................................................... Hawaiian Goose (Nene) Tree ...................................................................... Kukue Tree (Candlenut) Song ...................................................................................... Hawaii Ponoi Entered the Union ............................................................ August 21, 1959 Capital .......................................................................................... Honolulu

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 53,927 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 26th Population ................................................................................. 17,019,068 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 4th Density per square mile ............................................................. 315.6 Capital City ............................................................................... Tallahassee Population .............................................................................. 155,171 Rank in State ................................................................................... 8th Largest City ............................................................................ Jacksonville Population .............................................................................. 762,461 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 25 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 67 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 404 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 27 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 67 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 626

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Official State Website ..................................... http://www.myflorida.com Governor’s Website .......................................... http://www.state.fl.us/eog State Legislative Website .................................. http://www.leg.state.fl.us State Judicial Website .......................................... http://www.flcourts.org

Official State Website ........................................... http://www.hawaii.gov Governor’s Website ................................................... http://gov.state.hi.us State Legislative Website .......................... http://www.capitol.hawaii.gov State Judicial Website .......................................... http://www.courts.hi.us

Georgia

Idaho

Nickname ................................................... The Empire State of the South Motto ..................................................... Wisdom, Justice and Moderation Flower ................................................................................. Cherokee Rose Bird ................................................................................... Brown Thrasher Tree .............................................................................................. Live Oak Song .......................................................................... Georgia on My Mind Entered the Union .............................................................. January 2, 1788 Capital .............................................................................................. Atlanta

Nickname ............................................................................ The Gem State Motto ................................................. Esto Perpetua (Let It Be Perpetual) Flower ............................................................................................. Syringa Bird .............................................................................. Mountain Bluebird Tree ............................................................................. Western White Pine Song .......................................................................... Here We Have Idaho Entered the Union .................................................................... July 3, 1890 Capital ................................................................................................ Boise

STATISTICS

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 57,906 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 21st Population ................................................................................... 8,684,715 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 9th Density per square mile ............................................................. 150.0 Capital City ...................................................................................... Atlanta Population .............................................................................. 424,868 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ..................................................................................... Atlanta Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 13 Number of Counties .............................................................................. 159 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 531 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 15 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 180 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 581

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 82,747 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 11th Population ................................................................................... 1,366,332 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 39th Density per square mile ....................................................................... 16.5 Capital City ........................................................................................ Boise Population .............................................................................. 189,847 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ....................................................................................... Boise Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 2 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 44 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 200 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 4 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 115 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 798

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.ga.us Governor’s Website ................................................. http://gov.state.ga.us/ State Legislative Website .............................. http://www.legis.state.ga.us State Judicial Website ................................ http://www.georgiacourts.org

Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.id.us Governor’s Website ....................................... http://www2.state.id.us/gov State Legislative Website ........................ http://www2.state.id.us/legislat State Judicial Website ............................. http://www2.state.id.us/judicial

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STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................... 6,423 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 47th Population ................................................................................... 1,257,608 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 42nd Density per square mile ............................................................. 195.8 Capital City .................................................................................. Honolulu Population .............................................................................. 378,155 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ................................................................................. Honolulu Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 2 Number of Counties .................................................................................. 5 Number of Municipal Governments ......................................................... 1 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 4 Number of School Districts ...................................................................... 1 Number of Special Districts ................................................................... 15

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Illinois

Iowa

Nickname ......................................................................... The Prairie State Motto .................................................... State Sovereignty-National Union Flower .................................................................................... Native Violet Bird ................................................................................................ Cardinal Tree ............................................................................................ White Oak Song ................................................................................................. Illinois Entered the Union .......................................................... December 3, 1818 Capital ....................................................................................... Springfield

Nickname ..................................................................... The Hawkeye State Motto .............................................................. Our Liberties We Prize and Our Rights We Will Maintain Flower ......................................................................................... Wild Rose Bird ................................................................................ Eastern Goldfinch Tree ....................................................................................................... Oak Song ................................................................................ The Song of Iowa Entered the Union ....................................................... December 28, 1846 Capital ...................................................................................... Des Moines

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 55,584 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 24th Population ................................................................................. 12,653,544 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 5th Density per square mile ............................................................. 227.6 Capital City ............................................................................... Springfield Population ............................................................................... 111,834 Rank in State ................................................................................... 6th Largest City ................................................................................... Chicago Population ........................................................................... 2,886,251 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 19 Number of Counties .............................................................................. 102 Number of Municipal Governments .................................................. 1,291 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 21 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 894 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 3,145

STATISTICS Land Area (square mile) ................................................................... 55,869 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 23rd Population ................................................................................... 2,944,062 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 30th Density per square mile ............................................................... 52.7 Capital City .............................................................................. Des Moines Population .............................................................................. 198,076 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ............................................................................. Des Moines Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 5 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 99 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 948 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 7 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 374 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 542

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Official State Website .............................................. http://www.state.il.us Governor’s Website .......................................... http://www.state.il.us/gov State Legislative Website ................................ http://www.legis.state.il.us State Judicial Website .................................... http://www.state.il.us/court

Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.ia.us Governor’s Website ................................. http://www.governor.state.ia.us State Legislative Website ............................... http://www.legis.state.ia.us State Judicial Website ............................... http://www.judicial.state.ia.us

Indiana

Kansas

Nickname ....................................................................... The Hoosier State Motto ...................................................................... Crossroads of America Flower ................................................................................................ Peony Bird ................................................................................................ Cardinal Tree ......................................................................................... Tulip Poplar Song ............................................ On the Banks of the Wabash, Far Away Entered the Union ........................................................ December 11, 1816 Capital ..................................................................................... Indianapolis

Nickname ................................................................... The Sunflower State Motto .......................................................................... Ad Astra per Aspera (To the Stars through Difficulties) Flower ................................................................... Wild Native Sunflower Bird ........................................................................... Western Meadowlark Tree .......................................................................................... Cottonwood Song ............................................................................ Home on the Range Entered the Union ............................................................ January 29, 1861 Capital .............................................................................................. Topeka

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 35,867 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 38th Population ................................................................................... 6,195,643 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 14th Density per square mile ............................................................. 172.7 Capital City ............................................................................. Indianapolis Population .............................................................................. 783,612 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ............................................................................ Indianapolis Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 9 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 92 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 567 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 11 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 295 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 1,125

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.in.us Governor’s Website ............................................... http://www.in.gov/gov State Legislative Website ............................ http://www.in.gov/legislative State Judicial Website ................................... http://www.in.gov/judiciary

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 81,815 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 13th Population ................................................................................... 2,723,507 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 33rd Density per square mile ............................................................... 33.3 Capital City ...................................................................................... Topeka Population .............................................................................. 122,103 Rank in State ................................................................................... 4th Largest City .................................................................................... Wichita Population ...................................................................................... 355,126 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 4 Number of Counties .............................................................................. 105 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 627 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 6 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 304 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 1,533

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ................................. http://www.accesskansas.org Governor’s Website ........................................ http://www.ksgovernor.org State Legislative Website ............................. http://www.kslegislature.org State Judicial Website ......................................... http://www.kscourts.org

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Kentucky

Maine

Nickname .................................................................... The Bluegrass State Motto ................................................... United We Stand, Divided We Fall Flower ........................................................................................ Goldenrod Bird ................................................................................................ Cardinal Tree ......................................................................................... Tulip Poplar Song ..................................................................... My Old Kentucky Home Entered the Union ................................................................... June 1, 1792 Capital .......................................................................................... Frankfort

Nickname .................................................................... The Pine Tree State Motto ................................................................ Dirigo (I Direct or I Lead) Flower ........................................................... White Pine Cone and Tassel Bird ............................................................................................ Chickadee Tree ........................................................................................... White Pine Song ........................................................................... State of Maine Song Entered the Union .............................................................. March 15, 1820 Capital ............................................................................................ Augusta

STATISTICS

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 39,728 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 36th Population .................................................................................... 4,117,827 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 26th Density per square mile ............................................................. 103.7 Capital City .................................................................................. Frankfort Population ................................................................................. 27,741 Rank in State ................................................................................... 7th Largest City ......................................................... Louisville-Jefferson Co. Population .............................................................................. 693,604 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 6 Number of Counties .............................................................................. 120 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 424 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 8 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 176 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 720

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 30,862 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 39th Population ................................................................................... 1,305,728 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 40th Density per square mile ............................................................... 42.3 Capital City .................................................................................... Augusta Population ......................................................................................... 18,560 Rank in State ................................................................................... 9th Largest City ................................................................................... Portland Population ................................................................................. 64,249 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 2 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 16 Number of Municipal Governments ....................................................... 22 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 4 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 282 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 222

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Official State Website ................................................. http://kentucky.gov Governor’s Website ................................................ http://governor.ky.gov Legislative Website ........................................... http://www.lrc.state.ky.us Judicial Website ................................................... http://www.kycourts.net

Official State Website ........................................... http://www.state.me.us Governor’s Website ............................... http://www.state.me.us/governor Legislative Website ...................................... http://janus.state.me.us/legis Judicial Website .......................................... http://www.courts.state.me.us

Louisiana

Maryland

Nickname ........................................................................ The Pelican State Motto ......................................................... Union, Justice and Confidence Flower .......................................................................................... Magnolia Bird ........................................................................ Eastern Brown Pelican Tree ........................................................................................ Bald Cypress Songs ..................................................................... Give Me Louisiana and You Are My Sunshine Entered the Union ................................................................ April 30, 1812 Capital .................................................................................... Baton Rouge

Nicknames ........................................... The Old Line State and Free State Motto ........................................................... Fatti Maschii, Parole Femine (Manly Deeds, Womanly Words) Flower ............................................................................ Black-eyed Susan Bird.. ................................................................................ Baltimore Oriole Tree ............................................................................................ White Oak Song .................................................................... Maryland, My Maryland Entered the Union ................................................................ April 28, 1788 Capital ......................................................................................... Annapolis

STATISTICS

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 43,562 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 33rd Population ................................................................................... 4,496,334 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 24th Density per square mile ............................................................. 103.2 Capital City ............................................................................ Baton Rouge Population .............................................................................. 225,702 Rank in State .................................................................................. 2nd Largest City ........................................................................... New Orleans Population .............................................................................. 473,681 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 7 Number of Parishes ................................................................................. 64 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 302 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 9 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 78 Number of Special Districts ................................................................... 45

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................... 9,774 Rank in Nation ..................................................................................... 42nd Population ................................................................................... 5,508,909 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 19th Density per square mile ............................................................. 563.6 Capital City ................................................................................. Annapolis Population ................................................................................. 35,838 Rank in State ................................................................................ 22nd Largest City ................................................................................ Baltimore Population .............................................................................. 638,614 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 8 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 24 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 157 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 10 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 24 Number of Special Districts ................................................................... 85

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Official State Website ...................................... http://www.marlyand.gov Governor’s Website ........................................ http://www.gov.state.md.us Legislative Website ...................................... http://www.mlis.state.md.us Judicial Website ......................................... http://www.courts.state.md.us

Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.la.us Governor’s Website .......................................... http://www.gov.state.la.us Legislative Website ........................................ http://www.legis.state.la.us Judicial Website .......................... http://www.state.la.us/gov_judicial.htm

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Massachusetts

Minnesota

Nickname ............................................................................. The Bay State Motto .................................... Ense Petit Placidam Sub Libertate Quietem (By the Sword We Seek Peace, but Peace Only under Liberty) Flower ........................................................................................ Mayflower Bird ............................................................................................ Chickadee Tree ...................................................................................... American Elm Song .................................................................. All Hail to Massachusetts Entered the Union ............................................................ February 6, 1788 Capital .............................................................................................. Boston

Nickname ................................................................... The North Star State Motto ................................................... L’Etoile du Nord (The North Star) Flower ......................................................... Pink and White Lady-Slipper Bird ..................................................................................... Common Loon Tree ............................................................................................... Red Pine Song .................................................................................. Hail! Minnesota Entered the Union ................................................................. May 11, 1858 Capital ............................................................................................. St. Paul

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 79,610 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 14th Population ................................................................................... 5,059,375 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 21st Density per square mile ............................................................... 63.6 Capital City ..................................................................................... St. Paul Population .............................................................................. 284,037 Rank in State .................................................................................. 2nd Largest City ............................................................................ Minneapolis Population .............................................................................. 375,635 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 8 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 87 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 854 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 10 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 415 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 403

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................... 7,840 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 45th Population ................................................................................... 6,433,422 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 13th Density per square mile ............................................................. 820.6 Capital City ...................................................................................... Boston Population .............................................................................. 589,281 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ..................................................................................... Boston Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 10 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 14 Number of Municipal Governments ....................................................... 45 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 12 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 349 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 403

STATISTICS

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Official State Website .............................................. http://www.mass.gov Governor’s Website ........................................ http://www.state.ma.us/gov Legislative Website ...................................... http://www.state.ma.us/legis Judicial Website .......................................... http://www.state.ma.us/courts

Official State Website ........................................... http://www.state.mn.us Governor’s Website ............................... http://www.governor.state.mn.us Legislative Website ......................................... http://www.leg.state.mn.us Judicial Website ............................... http://www.courts.state.mn.us/home

Michigan

Mississippi

Nickname ................................................................... The Wolverine State Motto ............................... Si Quaeris Peninsulam Amoenam Circumspice (If You Seek a Pleasant Peninsula, Look About You) Flower ................................................................................ Apple Blossom Bird .................................................................................................... Robin Tree ........................................................................................... White Pine Song ..................................................................... Michigan, My Michigan Entered the Union ............................................................ January 26, 1837 Capital ............................................................................................. Lansing

Nickname .................................................................... The Magnolia State Motto .............................................. Virtute et Armis (By Valor and Arms) Flower .......................................................................................... Magnolia Bird ........................................................................................ Mockingbird Tree .............................................................................................. Magnolia Song ................................................................................... Go, Mississippi Entered the Union ....................................................... December 10, 1817 Capital ............................................................................................. Jackson

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 46,907 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 31st Population ................................................................................... 2,881,281 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 31st Density per square mile ............................................................... 61.4 Capital City ..................................................................................... Jackson Population .............................................................................. 180,881 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City .................................................................................... Jackson Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 4 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 82 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 296 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 6 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 152 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 458

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 56,804 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 22nd Population ................................................................................. 10,079,985 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 8th Density per square mile ............................................................. 177.5 Capital City ..................................................................................... Lansing Population ............................................................................... 118,588 Rank in State ................................................................................... 6th Largest City ..................................................................................... Detroit Population .............................................................................. 925,051 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 15 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 83 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 533 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 17 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 734 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 366

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ....................................... http://www.michigan.gov Governor’s Website ................................... http://www.michigan.gov/gov Legislative Website .......................... http://www.michiganlegislature.org Judicial Website ..................................... http://www.courts.michigan.gov

STATISTICS

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ................................................. http://www.ms.gov Governor’s Website ............................... http://www.governor.state.ms.us Legislative Website ........................................... http://www.ls.state.ms.us Judicial Website ............................................ http://www.mssc.state.ms.us

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Missouri

Nebraska

Nickname .................................................................... The Show Me State Motto ........................................................ Salus Populi Suprema Lex Esto (The Welfare of the People Shall Be the Supreme Law) Flower ............................................................... White Hawthorn Blossom Bird ............................................................................................... Bluebird Tree ............................................................................ Flowering Dogwood Song .................................................................................... Missouri Waltz Entered the Union ............................................................ August 10, 1821 Capital ................................................................................... Jefferson City

Nickname ................................................................. The Cornhusker State Motto .................................................................... Equality Before the Law Flower ........................................................................................ Goldenrod Bird ........................................................................... Western Meadowlark Tree ........................................................................... Western Cottonwood Song ............................................................................. Beautiful Nebraska Entered the Union ................................................................ March 1, 1867 Capital ............................................................................................. Lincoln

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 76,872 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 15th Population ................................................................................... 1,739,291 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 38th Density per square mile ............................................................... 22.6 Capital City ..................................................................................... Lincoln Population .............................................................................. 232,362 Rank in State ................................................................................. 2nd Largest City ..................................................................................... Omaha Population .............................................................................. 399,357 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 3 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 93 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 531 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 5 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 576 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 1,146

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 68,886 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 18th Population ................................................................................... 5,704,484 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 17th Density per square mile ............................................................... 82.8 Capital City ........................................................................... Jefferson City Population ................................................................................. 39,636 Rank in State ................................................................................. 15th Largest City ............................................................................. Kansas City Population .............................................................................. 443,471 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 9 Number of Counties .............................................................................. 115 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 946 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 11 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 524 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 1,514

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ........................................... http://www.state.mo.us Governor’s Website ........................................ http://www.gov.state.mo.us Legislative Website .................................... http://www.moga.state.mo.us Judicial Website ............................................ http://www.osca.state.mo.us

Montana Nickname ...................................................................... The Treasure State Motto .......................................................... Oro y Plata (Gold and Silver) Flower .......................................................................................... Bitterroot Bird ........................................................................... Western Meadowlark Tree .................................................................................... Ponderosa Pine Song .............................................................................................. Montana Entered the Union ......................................................... November 8, 1889 Capital .............................................................................................. Helena

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) .............................................................. 145,552 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 4th Population ...................................................................................... 917,621 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 44th Density per square mile ................................................................. 6.3 Capital City ...................................................................................... Helena Population ................................................................................. 25,780 Rank in State ................................................................................... 6th Largest City .................................................................................... Billings Population ................................................................................. 89,847 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 1 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 56 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 129 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 3 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 453 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 592

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.mt.us Governor’s Website .............. http://www.discoveringmontana.com/gov2 Legislative Website ................................................... http://leg.state.mt.us Judicial Website .................................... http://www.lawlibrary.state.mt.us

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STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.ne.us Governor’s Website ........................................................ http://gov.nol.org Legislative Website ................................... http://www.unicam.state.ne.us Judicial Website ............................................................ http://court.nol.org

Nevada Nickname .......................................................................... The Silver State Motto ........................................................................... All for Our Country Flower ......................................................................................... Sagebrush Bird .............................................................................. Mountain Bluebird Tree .............................................. Bristlecone Pine and Single-leaf Pinon Song ......................................................................... Home Means Nevada Entered the Union ........................................................... October 31, 1864 Capital ...................................................................................... Carson City

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) .............................................................. 109,826 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 7th Population ................................................................................... 2,241,154 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 35th Density per square mile ............................................................... 20.4 Capital City .............................................................................. Carson City Population ................................................................................. 52,457 Rank in State ................................................................................... 6th Largest City ................................................................................ Las Vegas Population .............................................................................. 508,604 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 3 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 17 Number of Municipal Governments ....................................................... 19 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 5 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 17 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 158

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website .................................................. http://www.nv.gov Governor’s Website ......................................... http://www.gov.state.nv.us Legislative Website .......................................... http://www.leg.state.nv.us Judicial Website ........................ http://silver.state.nv.us/elec_judicial.htm

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New Hampshire

New Mexico

Nickname ........................................................................ The Granite State Motto ................................................................................ Live Free or Die Flower ...................................................................................... Purple Lilac Bird ......................................................................................... Purple Finch Tree .......................................................................................... White Birch Song ........................................................................... Old New Hampshire Entered the Union ................................................................. June 21, 1788 Capital ............................................................................................ Concord

Nickname .......................................................... The Land of Enchantment Motto ............................................... Crescit Eundo (It Grows As It Goes) Flower ........................................................... Yucca (Our Lord’s Candles) Bird ..................................................................................... Chaparral Bird Tree .................................................................................................... Pinon Songs .................................................................. Asi es Nuevo Mexico and O, Fair New Mexico Entered the Union .............................................................. January 6, 1912 Capital ............................................................................................ Santa Fe

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................... 8,968 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 44th Population ................................................................................... 1,287,687 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 41st Density per square mile ............................................................. 143.6 Capital City .................................................................................... Concord Population ................................................................................. 40,687 Rank in State .................................................................................. 3rd Largest City .............................................................................. Manchester Population .............................................................................. 108,398 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 2 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 10 Number of Municipal Governments ....................................................... 13 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 4 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 178 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 148

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.nh.us Governor’s Website ...................................... http://www.nh.gov/governor Legislative Website ................................ http://www.gencourt.state.nh.us Judicial Website ........................................... http://www.courts.state.nh.us

New Jersey Nickname ........................................................................ The Garden State Motto ...................................................................... Liberty and Prosperity Flower ................................................................................................ Violet Bird ................................................................................ Eastern Goldfinch Tree ............................................................................................... Red Oak Song ......................................................................... I’m From New Jersey Entered the Union ....................................................... December 18, 1787 Capital ............................................................................................. Trenton

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................... 7,417 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 46th Population ................................................................................... 8,638,396 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 10th Density per square mile ......................................................... 1,164.7 Capital City .................................................................................... Trenton Population ................................................................................. 85,650 Rank in State ................................................................................... 9th Largest City .................................................................................... Newark Population .............................................................................. 277,000 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 13 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 21 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 324 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 15 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 604 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 276

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.nj.us Governor’s Website ................................. http://www.state.nj.us/governor Legislative Website ....................................... http://www.njleg.state.nj.us Judicial Website ....................................... http://www.judiciary.state.nj.us

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) .............................................................. 121,356 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 5th Population ................................................................................... 1,874,614 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 36th Density per square mile ............................................................... 15.4 Capital City .................................................................................... Santa Fe Population ................................................................................. 62,203 Rank in State .................................................................................. 3rd Largest City ........................................................................... Albuquerque Population .............................................................................. 463,874 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 3 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 33 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 101 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 5 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 89 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 628

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ........................................... http://www.state.nm.us Governor’s Website ............................... http://www.governor.state.nm.us Legislative Website ............................................... http://legis.state.nm.us Judicial Website ................................................ http://www.nmcourts.com

New York Nickname ........................................................................ The Empire State Motto ................................................................. Excelsior (Ever Upward) Flower .................................................................................................. Rose Bird ............................................................................................... Bluebird Tree ......................................................................................... Sugar Maple Song .................................................................................. I Love New York Entered the Union ................................................................. July 26, 1788 Capital .............................................................................................. Albany

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 47,214 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 30th Population ................................................................................. 19,190,115 Rank in Nation ............................................................................... 3rd Density per square mile ............................................................. 406.4 Capital City ...................................................................................... Albany Population ................................................................................. 95,658 Rank in State ................................................................................... 6th Largest City ........................................................................ New York City Population ........................................................................... 8,084,316 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 29 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 62 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 616 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 31 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 703 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 1,135

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.ny.us Governor’s Website ................................ http://www.state.ny.us/governor Senate Website ............................................. http://www.senate.state.ny.us Assembly Website .......................................... http://assembly.state.ny.us Judicial Website ........................................... http://www.courts.state.ny.us

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North Carolina

Ohio

Nickname .................................... The Tar Heel State and Old North State Motto .............................................................................. Esse Quam Videri (To Be Rather Than to Seem) Flower .......................................................................................... Dogwood Bird ................................................................................................ Cardinal Tree .................................................................................... Long Leaf Pine Song ........................................................................... The Old North State Entered the United States ........................................... November 21, 1789 Capital ............................................................................................. Raleigh

Nickname ...................................................................... The Buckeye State Motto ................................................... With God, All Things Are Possible Flower ............................................................................. Scarlet Carnation Bird ................................................................................................ Cardinal Tree ............................................................................................... Buckeye Song .................................................................................... Beautiful Ohio Entered the Union ................................................................ March 1, 1803 Capital ......................................................................................... Columbus

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 40,948 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 35th Population ................................................................................. 11,435,798 Rank in Nation .................................................................................. 7th Density per square mile ................................................................ 279.3 Capital City ................................................................................. Columbus Population ...................................................................................... 725,228 Rank in State ...................................................................................... 1st Largest City ................................................................................ Columbus Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 18 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 88 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 942 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 20 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 662 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 631

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 48,711 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 29th Population ................................................................................... 8,407,248 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 11th Density per square mile ............................................................. 172.6 Capital City ..................................................................................... Raleigh Population .............................................................................. 306,944 Rank in State .................................................................................. 2nd Largest City ................................................................................. Charlotte Population .............................................................................. 580,597 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 13 Number of Counties .............................................................................. 100 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 541 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 15 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 120 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 319

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ........................................... http://www.ncgov.com Governor’s Website ................................ http://www.governor.state.nc.us Legislative Website .................................................. http://www.ncleg.net Judicial Website ................................................... http://www.nccourts.org

North Dakota Nickname ..................................................................... Peace Garden State Motto .............................................. Liberty and Union, Now and Forever, One and Inseparable Flower ............................................................................ Wild Prairie Rose Bird ........................................................................... Western Meadowlark Tree ...................................................................................... American Elm Song ........................................................................... North Dakota Hymn Entered the Union ......................................................... November 2, 1889 Capital .......................................................................................... Bismarck

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 68,976 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 17th Population ...................................................................................... 633,837 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 48th Density per square mile ................................................................. 9.2 Capital City .................................................................................. Bismarck Population ......................................................................................... 55,532 Rank in State .................................................................................. 2nd Largest City ....................................................................................... Fargo Population .................................................................................. 90,599 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 1 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 53 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 360 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 3 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 230 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 764

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................. http://discovernd.com Governor’s Website ................................ http://www.governor.state.nd.us Legislative Website ............................................ http://www.state.nd.us/lr Judicial Website ............................................ http://www.court.state.nd.us

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STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.oh.us Governor’s Website ............................................. http://governor.ohio.gov Legislative Website ....... http://www.ohio.gov/ohio/GovState.stm#ohleg Judicial Website .......................................... http://www.sconet.state.oh.us

Oklahoma Nickname ........................................................................ The Sooner State Motto .......................... Labor Omnia Vincit (Labor Conquers All Things) Flower .......................................................................................... Mistletoe Bird ..................................................................... Scissor-tailed Flycatcher Tree ................................................................................................. Redbud Song ............................................................................................ Oklahoma Entered the Union ....................................................... November 16, 1907 Capital ................................................................................. Oklahoma City

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 68,667 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 19th Population .................................................................................... 3,511,532 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 28th Density per square mile .................................................................. 51.1 Capital City ......................................................................... Oklahoma City Population ...................................................................................... 519,034 Rank in State ..................................................................................... 1st Largest City ........................................................................ Oklahoma City Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 5 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 77 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 590 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 7 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 544 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 560

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.ok.us Governor’s Website ............................... http://www.governor.state.ok.us/ Legislative Website .......................................... http://www.lsb.state.ok.us Judicial Website .......................................................... http://www.oscn.net

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Oregon

Rhode Island

Nickname ........................................................................ The Beaver State Motto ......................................................... She Flies with Her Own Wings Flower .................................................................................. Oregon Grape Bird ........................................................................... Western Meadowlark Tree .......................................................................................... Douglas Fir Song ............................................................................ Oregon, My Oregon Entered the Union ......................................................... February 14, 1859 Capital ................................................................................................ Salem

Nicknames .................................................. Little Rhody and Ocean State Motto ................................................................................................... Hope Flower ................................................................................................ Violet Bird ................................................................................ Rhode Island Red Tree ............................................................................................ Red Maple Song ....................................................................................... Rhode Island Entered the Union ................................................................. May 29, 1790 Capital ....................................................................................... Providence

STATISTICS

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 95,997 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 10th Population ................................................................................... 3,559,596 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 27th Density per square mile ............................................................... 37.1 Capital City ........................................................................................ Salem Population .............................................................................. 140,977 Rank in State .................................................................................. 3rd Largest City ................................................................................... Portland Population .............................................................................. 539,438 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 5 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 36 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 240 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 7 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 197 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 927

Land Area (square mile) ..................................................................... 1,045 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 50th Population ................................................................................... 1,076,164 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 43rd Density per square mile ......................................................... 1,029.8 Capital City ............................................................................... Providence Population ...................................................................................... 175,901 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City .............................................................................. Providence Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 2 Number of Counties .................................................................................. 5 Number of Municipal Governments ......................................................... 8 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 4 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 36 Number of Special Districts ................................................................... 75

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.ri.us Governor’s Website .................................. http://www.governor.state.ri.us Legislative Website ......................................... http://www.rilin.state.ri.us Judicial Website ............................................ http://www.courts.state.ri.us

Official State Website ........................................... http://www.oregon.gov Governor’s Website ................................. http://www.governor.state.or.us Legislative Website ........................................... http://www.leg.state.or.us Judicial Website ................................................ http://www.ojd.state.or.us

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Pennsylvania

South Carolina

Nickname ..................................................................... The Keystone State Motto ..................................................... Virtue, Liberty and Independence Animal ............................................................................ White-tailed Deer Flower .............................................................................. Mountain Laurel Tree ............................................................................................... Hemlock Song ....................................................................................... Pennsylvania Entered the Union ....................................................... December 12, 1787 Capital ........................................................................................ Harrisburg

Nickname ..................................................................... The Palmetto State Motto .................................................................. Animis Opibusque Parati (Prepared in Mind and Resources) and Dum Spiro Spero (While I breathe, I Hope) Flower ............................................................................ Yellow Jessamine Bird ...................................................................................... Carolina Wren Tree ............................................................................................... Palmetto Songs ....................................... Carolina and South Carolina on My Mind Entered the Union ................................................................. May 23, 1788 Capital .......................................................................................... Columbia

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 44,817 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 32nd Population ................................................................................. 12,365,455 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 6th Density per square mile ............................................................. 275.9 Capital City ................................................................................ Harrisburg Population .................................................................................. 48,540 Rank in State ................................................................................. 13th Largest City ............................................................................ Philadelphia Population ........................................................................... 1,492,231 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 19 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 67 Number of Municipal Governments .................................................. 1,018 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 21 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 501 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 1,885

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.pa.us Governor’s Website ................................ http://www.governor.state.pa.us Legislative Website ....................................... http://www.legis.state.pa.us Judicial Website ........................................... http://www.courts.state.pa.us

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 30,110 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 40th Population ................................................................................... 4,147,152 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 25th Density per square mile ............................................................. 137.7 Capital City .................................................................................. Columbia Population ....................................................................................... 117,394 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ................................................................................. Columbia Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 6 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 46 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 269 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 8 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 90 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 301

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ....................................... http://www.myscgov.com Governor’s Website ...................................... http://www.scgovernor.com/ Legislative Website ...................................... http://www.scstatehouse.net Judicial Website ......................................... http://www.judicial.state.sc.us

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South Dakota

Texas

Nicknames .......................................................... The Mt. Rushmore State Motto .............................................................. Under God the People Rule Flower ............................................................................. American Pasque Bird ............................................................ Chinese ring-necked pheasant Tree ............................................................................... Black Hills Spruce Song ............................................................................. Hail, South Dakota Entered the Union ......................................................... November 2, 1889 Capital ................................................................................................ Pierre

Nickname .................................................................... The Lone Star State Motto .......................................................................................... Friendship Flower ................................... Bluebonnet (Buffalo Clover, Wolf Flower) Bird ........................................................................................ Mockingbird Tree .................................................................................................... Pecan Song ................................................................................. Texas, Our Texas Entered the Union ....................................................... December 29, 1845 Capital ............................................................................................... Austin

STATISTICS

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 75,885 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 16th Population ...................................................................................... 764,309 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 46th Density per square mile ............................................................... 10.1 Capital City ........................................................................................ Pierre Population ................................................................................. 13,876 Rank in State ................................................................................... 7th Largest City .............................................................................. Sioux Falls Population .............................................................................. 130,491 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 1 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 66 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 308 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 3 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 176 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 376

Land Area (square miles) .............................................................. 261,797 Rank in Nation ............................................................................... 2nd Population ................................................................................. 22,118,509 Rank in Nation ............................................................................... 2nd Density per square mile ............................................................... 84.5 Capital City ....................................................................................... Austin Population .............................................................................. 671,873 Rank in State ................................................................................... 4th Largest City ................................................................................... Houston Population ........................................................................... 2,009,834 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 32 Number of Counties .............................................................................. 254 Number of Municipal Governments .................................................. 1,196 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 34 Number of School Districts ............................................................... 1,040 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 2,245

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Official State Website ............................................ http://www.state.sd.us Governor’s Website ................................ http://www.state.sd.us/governor Legislative Website ................................................. http://legis.state.sd.us Judicial Website ............................................... http://www.sdjudicial.com

Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.tx.us Governor’s Website ................................. http://www.governor.state.tx.us Legislative Website .................................... http://www.capitol.state.tx.us Judicial Website ........................................... http://www.courts.state.tx.us

Tennessee

Utah

Nickname .................................................................... The Volunteer State Motto ............................................................... Agriculture and Commerce Flower .................................................................................................... Iris Bird ........................................................................................ Mockingbird Tree ......................................................................................... Tulip Poplar Songs ..................................................... When It’s Iris Time in Tennessee; The Tennessee Waltz; My Homeland, Tennessee My Tennessee; and Rocky Top Entered the Union ................................................................... June 1, 1796 Capital .......................................................................................... Nashville

Nickname ....................................................................... The Beehive State Motto .............................................................................................. Industry Flower .......................................................................................... Sego Lily Bird ................................................................................ California Seagull Tree .......................................................................................... Blue Spruce Song ............................................................................ Utah, We Love Thee Entered the Union .............................................................. January 4, 1896 Capital .................................................................................. Salt Lake City

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 41,217 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 34th Population ................................................................................... 5,841,748 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 16th Density per square mile ............................................................. 141.7 Capital City .................................................................................. Nashville Population .............................................................................. 545,915 Rank in State .......................................................................................... 2nd Largest City ................................................................................. Memphis Population .............................................................................. 648,882 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 9 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 95 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 349 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 11 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 138 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 475

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................. http://www.state.tn.us Governor’s Website ................................. http://www.state.tn.us/governor Legislative Website .............................. http://www.legislature.state.tn.us Judicial Website ................................................. http://www.tsc.state.tn.us

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STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 82,144 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 12th Population ................................................................................... 2,351,467 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 34th Density per square mile ............................................................... 28.6 Capital City .......................................................................... Salt Lake City Population .............................................................................. 181,266 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ......................................................................... Salt Lake City Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 3 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 29 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 236 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 5 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 40 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 300

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ............................................... http://www.utah.gov Governor’s Website ................................... http://www.utah.gov/governor Legislative Website ............................................. http://www.le.state.ut.us Judicial Website ............................................................ http://utcourts.gov

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Vermont

Washington

Nickname ......................................................... The Green Mountain State Motto ............................................................................ Freedom and Unity Flower ....................................................................................... Red Clover Bird ...................................................................................... Hermit Thrush Tree ......................................................................................... Sugar Maple Song .................................................................................... Hail, Vermont! Entered the Union ................................................................ March 4, 1791 Capital ........................................................................................ Montpelier

Nickname ................................................................... The Evergreen State Motto ............................ Alki (Chinook Indian word meaning By and By) Flower ...................................................................... Coast Rhododendron Bird ................................................................................ Willow Goldfinch Tree ................................................................................ Western Hemlock Song ....................................................................... Washington, My Home Entered the Union ....................................................... November 11, 1889 Capital ........................................................................................... Olympia

STATISTICS

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................... 9,250 Rank in Nation ............................................................................. 43rd Population ...................................................................................... 619,107 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 49th Density per square mile ............................................................... 66.9 Capital City ................................................................................ Montpelier Population ................................................................................... 8,035 Rank in State ................................................................................. 13th Largest City ............................................................................... Burlington Population ......................................................................................... 38,889 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 1 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 14 Number of Municipal Governments ....................................................... 47 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 3 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 288 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 152

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 66,544 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 20th Population ................................................................................... 6,131,445 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 15th Density per square mile ............................................................... 92.1 Capital City ................................................................................... Olympia Population ................................................................................. 42,530 Rank in State ................................................................................. 18th Largest City ...................................................................................... Seattle Population .............................................................................. 570,426 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 9 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 39 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 279 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 11 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 296 Number of Special Districts .............................................................. 1,173

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES

Official State Website .................................................. http://vermont.gov Governor’s Website ............................ http://www.vermont.gov/governor Legislative Website ........................................... http://www.leg.state.vt.us Judicial Website ..................................... http://www.vermontjudiciary.org

Official State Website ............................................... http://access.wa.gov Governor’s Website ...................................... http://www.governor.wa.gov Legislative Website ............................................... http://www.leg.wa.gov Judicial Website ................................................ http://www.courts.wa.gov

Virginia

West Virginia

Nickname ..................................................................... The Old Dominion Motto ............................... Sic Semper Tyrannis (Thus Always to Tyrants) Flower .......................................................................................... Dogwood Bird ................................................................................................ Cardinal Tree .............................................................................................. Dogwood Song .......................................................... Carry Me Back to Old Virginia Entered the Union ................................................................. June 25, 1788 Capital ......................................................................................... Richmond

Nickname .................................................................... The Mountain State Motto ..................................................................... Montani Semper Liberi (Mountaineers Are Always Free) Flower ................................................................................ Rhododendron Bird ................................................................................................ Cardinal Tree ......................................................................................... Sugar Maple Songs ............................................. West Virginia, My Home Sweet Home; The West Virginia Hills; and This is My West Virginia Entered the Union ................................................................. June 20, 1863 Capital ........................................................................................ Charleston

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 39,594 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 37th Population ................................................................................... 7,386,330 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 12th Density per square miles ............................................................ 186.6 Capital City ................................................................................. Richmond Population .............................................................................. 197,456 Rank in State ................................................................................... 4th Largest City ........................................................................ Virginia Beach Population .............................................................................. 433,934 Number of Representatives in Congress ................................................ 11 Number of Counties .............................................................................. 135 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 229 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 13 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 135 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 196

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ......................................... http://www.virginia.gov Governor’s Website ................................ http://www.governor.state.va.us Legislative Website ................................................. http://legis.state.va.us Judicial Website ........................................... http://www.courts.state.va.us

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ............................................................... 24,078 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 41st Population ................................................................................... 1,810,354 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 37th Density per square mile ............................................................... 75.2 Capital City ................................................................................ Charleston Population ................................................................................. 53,421 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ............................................................................... Charleston Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 3 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 55 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 234 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 5 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 55 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 342

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ................................................. http://www.wv.gov Governor’s Website ............................... http://www.state.wv.us/governor Legislative Website ................ http://www.legis.state.wv.us/legishp.html Judicial Website .......................................... http://www.state.wv.us/wvsca

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Wisconsin

District of Columbia

Nickname* .......................................................................................................................... The Badger State Motto ............................................................................................. Forward Flower ..................................................................................... Wood Violet Bird .................................................................................................... Robin Tree ......................................................................................... Sugar Maple Song .................................................................................... On, Wisconsin! Entered the Union ................................................................. May 29, 1848 Capitol ........................................................................................... Madison

Motto ...................................................... Justitia Omnibus (Justice to All) Flower .................................................................... American Beauty Rose Bird ........................................................................................ Wood Thrush Tree .......................................................................................... Scarlet Oak Became U.S. Capital ..................................................... December 1, 1800

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 54,310 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 25th Population ................................................................................... 5,472,299 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 20th Density per square mile ............................................................. 100.8 Capital City ................................................................................... Madison Population ............................................................................... 215,211 Rank in State .................................................................................. 2nd Largest City .............................................................................. Milwaukee Population .............................................................................. 590,895 Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 8 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 72 Number of Municipal Governments ..................................................... 585 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes ............................................................ 10 Number of School Districts .................................................................. 431 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 684

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ...................................... http://www.wisconsin.gov Governor’s Website ................................... http://www.wisgov.state.wi.us Legislative Website ....................................... http://www.legis.state.wi.us Judicial Website ........................................... http://www.courts.state.wi.us

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ........................................................................ 63 Population ...................................................................................... 563,384 Density per square mile ........................................................... 9378.0 Delegate to Congress* .............................................................................. 1 Number of Municipal Governments ......................................................... 1 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 3 Number of School Districts ...................................................................... 2 Number of Special Districts ..................................................................... 1 *Committee voting privileges only.

INTERNET ADDRESSES Official Website ......................................... http://www.washingtondc.gov Mayor’s Website ...................................... http://dc.gov/mayor/index.shtm Legislative Website ................... http://www.dccouncil.washington.dc.us Judicial Website ........................................................ http://www.dcbar.org

American Samoa

*unofficial

Motto ............................... Samoa-Maumua le Atua (Samoa, God Is First) Flower .............................................................................. Paogo (Ula-fala) Plant ...................................................................................................... Ava Song ................................................................................... Amerika Samoa Became a Territory of the United States ............................................ 1900 Capital ........................................................................................ Pago Pago

Nicknames ............................. The Equality State and The Cowboy State Motto ...................................................................................... Equal Rights Flower ........................................................................... Indian Paintbrush Bird ........................................................................... Western Meadowlark Tree .......................................................................................... Cottonwood Song .............................................................................................. Wyoming Entered the Union ................................................................ July 10, 1890 Capital ......................................................................................... Cheyenne

Land Area (square miles) ........................................................................ 77 Population ......................................................................................... 57,291 Density per square mile ............................................................. 744.0 Capital City ................................................................................ Pago Pago Population ................................................................................... 4,100 Rank in Territory ........................................................................... 3rd Largest City ...................................................................................... Tafuna Population ........................................................................................... 8,409 Delegate to Congress ................................................................................ 1 Number of School Districts ...................................................................... 1

Wyoming

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ................................................................. 97,100 Rank in Nation ................................................................................ 9th Population ...................................................................................... 501,242 Rank in Nation .............................................................................. 51st Density per square mile ................................................................. 5.2 Capital City ................................................................................. Cheyenne Population ................................................................................. 53,658 Rank in State ................................................................................... 1st Largest City ................................................................................ Cheyenne Number of Representatives in Congress .................................................. 1 Number of Counties ................................................................................ 23 Number of Municipal Governments ....................................................... 98 Number of 2004 Electoral Votes .............................................................. 3 Number of School Districts .................................................................... 48 Number of Special Districts ................................................................. 546

STATISTICS

INTERNET ADDRESSES Official Website .................................................. http://www.asg-gov.com Governor’s Website ........................... http://www.government.as/gov.htm Legislative Website ............... http://www.government.as/legislative.htm Judicial Website ....................... http://www.government.as/highcourt.htm

STATE INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ........................................... http://www.state.wy.us Governor’sWebsite ... http://wyoming.gov/governor/governor_home.asp Legislative Website ......................................... http://legisweb.state.wy.us Judicial Website .......................................... http://www.courts.state.wy.us

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Guam

Puerto Rico

Nickname ....................................................................... Hub of the Pacific Flower ....................................................... Puti Tai Nobio (Bougainvillea) Bird ................................................................................. Toto (Fruit Dove) Tree ................................................................................. Ifit (Intsiabijuga) Song ......................................................................... Stand Ye Guamanians Stone ................................................................................................... Latte Animal ............................................................................................... Iguana Ceded to the United States by Spain ......................... December 10, 1898 Became a Territory ............................................................. August 1, 1950 Request to become a Commonwealth Plebiscite ............ November 1987 Capital ............................................................................................ Hagatna

Nickname ............................................................... Island of Enchantment Motto ................................................................... Joannes Est Nomen Ejus (John is Thy Name) Flower ................................................................................................. Maga Bird .................................................................................................. Reinita Tree .................................................................................................... Ceiba Song .................................................................................... La Borinquena Became a Territory of the United States ................... December 10, 1898 Became a self-governing Commonwealth .......................... July 25, 1952 Capital ........................................................................................... San Juan

STATISTICS

Land Area (square miles) ................................................................... 3,427 Population ................................................................................... 3,878,532 Density per square mile .......................................................... 1,111.3 Capital City ................................................................................... San Juan Population .............................................................................. 442,447 Largest City .................................................................................. San Juan Delegate to Congress* ......................................................................................................................................... 1 Number of School Districts ...................................................................... 1

Land Area (square miles) ...................................................................... 210 Population ...................................................................................... 154,805 Density per square mile ............................................................. 737.1 Capital ............................................................................................ Hagatna Population ................................................................................... 1,122 Rank in Territory .......................................................................... 18th Largest City .................................................................................... Dededo Population ......................................................................................... 42,980 Delegate to Congress ................................................................................ 1 Number of School Districts ...................................................................... 1

INTERNET ADDRESSES Official Website ................................................................. http://ns.gov.gu Governor’s Website ......................... http://ns.gov.gu/webtax/govoff.html Legislative Website ............................... http://www.guam.net/gov/senate Judicial Website ................................................ http://www.justice.gov.gu

Northern Mariana Islands Flower ........................................................................................... Plumeria Bird ........................................................................... Marianas Fruit Dove Tree Flame Tree Song ........................................................................ Gi TaloGi Halom Tasi Administered by the United States a trusteeship for the United Nations ............................ July 18, 1947 Voters approved a proposed constitution .................................. June 1975 U.S. president signed covenant agreeing to commonwealth status for the islands ....................... March 24, 1976 Became a self-governing Commonwealth ....................... January 9, 1978 Capital ............................................................................................... Saipan

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles) ...................................................................... 181 Population ......................................................................................... 69,221 Density per square mile ............................................................. 382.4 Capital City ....................................................................................... Saipan Population ................................................................................. 62,392 Largest City ...................................................................................... Saipan Delegate to Congress ................................................................................ 1 Number of School Districts ...................................................................... 1

INTERNET ADDRESSES

STATISTICS

*Committee voting privileges only

INTERNET ADDRESSES Official State Website ........................................ http://www.puertorico.pr Governor’s Website .............................. http://www.fortaleza.gobierno.pr Senate Website .................................. http://www.camaradepuertorico.org House Website .................................. http://www.camaradepuertorico.org Judicial Website ................................................. http://www.tribunalpr.org

U.S. Virgin Islands Nickname .............................................................. The American Paradise Motto .................................................................. United in Pride and Hope Flower ............................................................................ The Yellow Cedar Bird ............................................................ Yellow Breast or Banana Quit Song .......................................................................... Virgin Islands March Purchased from Denmark ................................................. March 31, 1917 Capital ......................................................... Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas

STATISTICS Land Area (square miles)* ...................................................................................................................... 134 Population ...................................................................................... 108,612 Density per square mile ............................................................. 810.5 Capital City ................................................. Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas Population ................................................................................. 12,500 Largest City ................................................ Charlotte Amalie, St. Thomas Delegate to Congress** ....................................................................................................................................... 1 Number of School Districts ...................................................................... 1 * The U.S. Virgin Islands is comprised of three large islands (St. Croix, St. John, and St. Thomas) and 50 smaller islands and cays. ** Committee voting privileges only.

INTERNET ADDRESSES Official Website .......................................................... http://www.usvi.org Governor’s Website .................................................... http://www.usvi.org Legislative Website ............................................ http://www.senate.gov.vi Judicial Website ............................................ http://www.vid.uscourts.gov

Official Website ............................................. http://www.saipan.com/gov Governor’s Website .......................... http://www.mariana-islands.gov.mp Legislative Website ............ http://www.saipan.com/gov/branches/senate Judicial Website ......................... http://cnmilaw.org/htmlpage/hpg34.htm

The Council of State Governments

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