The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL), established in 1975, is a "nonpartisan public officials' association composed of sitting state legislators" from the states, territories and commonwealths of the United States.

Background

According to their website, the mission of the Conference is:

to advance the effectiveness, independence and integrity of legislatures and to foster interstate cooperation . . . especially in support of state sovereignty and state flexibility and protection from unfunded federal mandates and unwarranted federal preemption. The conference promotes cooperation between state legislatures in the U.S. and those in other countries. . . . [and] is committed to improving the operations and management of state legislatures, and the effectiveness of legislators and legislative staff. NCSL also encourages the practice of high standards of conduct by legislators and legislative staff.

NCSL maintains an office in Denver, Colorado, and Washington, D.C.

Eight Standing Committees, composed of legislators and legislative staff appointed by the leadership of the legislatures, serve as the central organizing mechanism for NCSL members. Each Committee provides a means by which state legislators can share experience, information, and advice on a variety of state issues ranging from policy to management.

Committees meet together twice each year at the NCSL Capitol Forum and NCSL's Legislative Summit to adopt state-federal legislative policies that will ultimately guide NCSL's lobbying efforts in Washington, D.C. These committee meetings also serve as an opportunity for states to network and establish flows of information as well as experience-based suggestions from other states. In addition to the NCSL Capitol Forum and the Legislative Summit, NCSL builds the state legislative community by hosting various web seminars, leadership meetings, and access to relevant websites and online documents throughout the year.

Issues spanning multiple committee jurisdictions are managed by NCSL's Task Forces. Unlike the permanent Standing Committees, Task Forces are created for a specific period time and aim to develop positions on highly complex and controversial issues such as immigration reform and welfare. Task Forces are composed of 20 to 30 legislators and legislative staff who are appointed by the NCSL president or staff chair.

Day-to-day operations of the organization managed by its chief executive officer, Tim Storey. The organization is led by a legislator who serves as its president and by a legislative staffer who serves as staff chair. Twenty years after its founding, NCSL was led in 1994 by its first female president, former Congresswoman Karen McCarthy. Its first African-American president, Rep. Dan Blue, served in 1998–99. The 2021–22 president of NCSL is Representative Scott Saiki of Hawaii, and the staff chair is J.J. Gentry of South Carolina. Each year, NCSL's presidency alternates between legislators of the Republican and Democratic parties.

The NCSL is considered part of the 'Big Seven', a group of organizations that represent local and state government in the United States.

Presidents and staff chairs

Presidents and staff chairs
PresidentTermStaff chair
NameStateState officePolitical partyRegionNameStateState staff position
Kevin B. HarringtonMassachusettsSenate PresidentDemocraticEast1975Eugene FarnumMichiganSenate Fiscal Agency Director
Tom JensenTennesseeHouse Minority LeaderRepublicanSouth1975–76Bonnie ReeseWisconsinLegislative Council Executive Director
Martin Olav SaboMinnesotaHouse SpeakerDemocraticMidwest1976–77McDowell LeeAlabamaSenate Secretary
Fred AndersonColoradoSenate PresidentRepublicanWest1977–78Robert HermanNew YorkSpecial Assistant to the Speaker of the State Assembly
Jason BoeOregonSenate PresidentDemocraticWest1978–79Art PalmerNevadaNevada Legislative Counsel Bureau Director
George B. Roberts Jr.New HampshireHouse SpeakerRepublicanEast1979–80David JohnstonOhioLegislative Services Committee Director
Richard S. HodesFloridaHouse Speaker Pro TemporeDemocraticSouth1980–81Patrick FlahavenMinnesotaSenate Secretary
Ross DoyenKansasSenate PresidentRepublicanMidwest1981–82Robert SmarttNew JerseyGeneral Assembly Deputy Director
William F. PassannanteNew YorkAssembly Speaker Pro TemporeDemocraticEast1982–83Joe BrownFloridaSenate Secretary
Miles FerryUtahSenate PresidentRepublicanWest1983–84John LattimerIllinoisCommittee on International Cooperation Director
John BraggTennesseeHouse Deputy SpeakerDemocraitcSouth1984–85Leo MemmottUtahLegislative Fiscal Analyst
David NethingNorth DakotaSenate Majority LeaderRepublicanMidwest1985–86Dale CattanachWisconsinState Auditor
Irving J. StolbergConnecticutHouse SpeakerDemocraticEast1986–87Sue BaumanKansasExecutive Assistant to the Senate President
Ted L. StricklandColoradoSenate PresidentRepublicanWest1987–88John AndreasonIdahoLegislative Budget Office Director
Samuel B. Nunez Jr.LouisianaSenate President Pro TemporeDemocraticSouth1988–89Betty KingTexasSecretary of the Senate
Lee A. DanielsIllinoisHouse Minority LeaderRepublicanMidwest1989–90Patrick O'DonnellNebraskaClerk of the Legislature
John L. MartinMaineHouse SpeakerDemocraticEast1990–91William RussellVermontChief Counsel
Bud BurkeKansasSenate PresidentRepublicanMidwest1991–92Terry AndersonSouth DakotaLegislative Research Council Director
Art HamiltonArizonaHouse minority leaderDemocraticWest1992–93Donald SchneiderWisconsinSenate Chief Clerk
Robert ConnorDelawareSenate Minority WhipRepublicanEast1993–94John TurcotteMississippiJoint Legislative PEER Committee member
Karen McCarthyMissouriHouse memberDemocraticSouth1994Ted FerrisArizonaJoint Budget Committee member
Jane L. CampbellOhioHouse memberMidwest1995
James J. LackNew YorkSenateRepublicanEast1995–96Alfred "Butch" SpeerLouisianaHouse Clerk
Michael BoxAlabamaAlabamaDemocraticSouth1996–97Russell T. LarsonDelawareController General
Richard FinanOhioSenate PresidentRepublicanMidwest1997–98Anne WalkerMissouriHouse Chief Clerk
Dan BlueNorth CarolinaHouse Majoiry LeaderDemocraticSouth1998–99Tom TedcastleFloridaBill Drafting and General Counsel Director
Paul MannweilerIndianaHouse Republican LeaderRepublicanMidwest1999–2000John B. PhelpsFloridaHouse Clerk
Jim CostaCaliforniaSenate memberDemocratWest2000–01Diane BolenderIowaLegislative Service Bureau Director
Steve M. SalandNew YorkSenate memberRepublicanEast2001–02Ramona KenadyOregonHouse Chief Clerk
Angela MonsonOklahomaSenate memberDemocraticSouth2002–03Gary OlsonMichiganSenate Fiscal Agency Director
Martin StephensUtahHouse SpeakerRepublicanWest2003–04Max ArinderMississippiJoint Legislative PEER Committee Executive Director
John HursonMarylandHouse DelegateDemocraticSouth2004–05Jim GreenwaltMinnesotaSenate Information Systems Director
Steve RauschenbergerIllinoisSenate Assistant Republican LeaderRepublicanMidwest2005–06Susan Clarke SchaarVirginiaSenate Clerk
Leticia Van de PutteTexasSenate memberDemocraticSouth2006–07Steve MillerWisconsinLegislative Reference Bureau Chief
Donna StoneDelawareHouse memberRepublicanEast2007–08Sharon Crouch-SteidelVirginiaDirector of Information Systems Virginia
Joe HackneyNorth CarolinaSpeakerDemocraticSouth2008–09Gary VanLandinghamFloridaOffice of Program Policy Analysis and Government Accountability Director
Don BalfourGeorgiaSenateRepublicanSouth2009–10Nancy CyrNebraskaLegislative Research Division Legal Counsel
Richard T. MooreMassachusettsSenate memberDemocraticEast2010–11Tim RiceIllinoisLegislative Information System Executive Director
Stephen MorrisKansasSenate memberRepublicanMidwest2011–12Michael AdamsVirginiaSenate Director of Strategic Planning
Terie NorelliNew HampshireHouse memberDemocraticEast2012–13Patsy SpawTexasSecretary of the Senate
Bruce StarrOregonSenate memberRepublicanWest2013–14Tom WrightAlaskaChief of Staff to the House Speaker
Debbie SmithNevadaSenate memberDemocraticWest2014–15Margaret “Peggy” PietyIndianaIndiana Legislative Services Agency Senior Staff Attorney
Curt BrambleUtahSenate memberRepublicanWest2015–16Karl AroMarylandDepartment of Legislative Services Director
Mike GronstalIowaSenate Majority LeaderDemocraticMidwest2016Raúl BurciagaNew MexicoLegislative Council Service Director
Dan BlueNorth CarolinaSenate Democratic LeaderEast2017
Deb PetersSouth DakotaSenate memberRepublicanMidwest2017–18Chuck TruesdellKentuckyLegislative Research Commission
Toi HutchinsonIllinoisSenate memberDemocraticMidwest2018–19Jon HeiningTexasLegislative Council General Counsel
Robin VosWisconsinAssembly SpeakerRepublicanMidwest2019–21Martha WigtonGeorgiaHouse Budget and Research Office Director
Scott SaikiHawaiiHouse SpeakerDemocraticWest2021–20J.J. GentrySouth CarolinaSenate Counsel
Scott BedkeIdahoHouse SpeakerRepublicanWest2022–23Anne SappenfieldWisconsinLegislative Council Director
Robin VosWisconsinAssembly SpeakerMidwest
Brian Patrick KennedyRhode IslandHouse Speaker Pro TemporeDemocraticEast2023–24Sabrina LewellenArkansasDeputy Director and Assistant Secretary of the Senate
Wayne HarperUtahSenate President Pro TemporeRepublicanWest2024–25John SnyderKentuckyLegislative Research Commission Transportation Committee Staff Administrator

Committees

NCSL has eight standing committees whose membership consists of state legislators and staff:

  • Budgets and Revenue
  • Communications, Financial Services, and Interstate Commerce
  • Education
  • Health and Human Services
  • Labor and Economic Development
  • Law, Criminal Justice and Public Safety
  • Natural Resources and Infrastructure
  • Redistricting and Elections

These committees establish policy positions and coordinate lobbying efforts in Washington, D.C.

Task forces

NCSL uses task forces to complement the work of the eight standing committees. Composed of legislators and legislative staff, task forces are temporary and deal with issues that cut across the jurisdictions of multiple standing committees. Currently, there are eight task forces:

  • Agriculture
  • Cybersecurity
  • Energy Supply
  • Immigration and the States
  • Innovations in State Health Systems
  • Insurance
  • International Relations
  • Military and Veterans Affairs
  • State and Local Taxation

Policy positions

In the most general terms, NCSL works to enhance the role of states in the federal system. NCSL opposes unfunded federal mandates and federal preemption of state authority, providing state legislatures with the flexibility to implement policy solutions. NCSL supports enactment of the Main Street Fairness Act, which would simplify existing sales tax collection laws. The Act would grant states the authority to require all sellers, including online merchants, to collect sales and use taxes, generating billions of dollars of tax revenue for state governments.

NCSL also supports the SAFE Banking Act, which would facilitate access to banking and financial services for the legalized cannabis industry.

Professional staff associations

The organization runs nine professional staff associations.

American Society of Legislative Clerks and Secretaries

The American Society of Legislative Clerks and Secretaries (ASLCS) was founded in 1943 to improve legislative administration, and to establish better communication between clerks and secretaries throughout the United States and its territories. In 1974, ASLCS joined with several state legislative groups to form the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL). The society includes an active membership of more than four hundred principal clerks, secretaries, and legislative support staff.

Publications and standards

ASLCS publishes several reference and resource books, including the Legislative Administrator, the Professional Journal, the Roster and Reference Guide, the International Directory, Mason's Manual

The Legislative Administrator is the official newsletter of the American Society of Legislative Clerks and Secretaries.

Professional Journal

"The Journal" provides a forum to share experiences, expertise and opinions on a variety of subjects influencing our daily working environment.

International Directory

The International Directory is a booklet that provides a resource in English, Spanish and French of the objectives and goals of the American Society of Legislative Clerks and Secretaries (ASLCS), Association of Chief Clerks of Mexico's State Legislatures and the Federal Dict of Mexico (ANOMAC), Association of Central American Legislative Clerks (ATELCA), the Canadian Clerks-at-the Table, South African Legislative Secretaries Association (SALSA), and the Australian Clerks. The booklet also contains the names, phone numbers, fax numbers and e-mail addresses of the executive committee members of the respective organizations.

Inside the Legislative Process

Inside the Legislative Process is a research tool, providing information on state legislative processes and procedures. The ASLCS committee on Inside the Legislative Process is responsible for reviewing and producing this publication. The committee works closely with NCSL staff to develop survey questions and record the responses in a format that is easily usable by all legislative units and reflects current legislative processes.

International relations

Additionally, the Joint Canadian-American Clerks' Conference is held biennially in odd-numbered years. It is hosted alternately between Canada and the United States. Unlike other Society meetings, participation in this conference is limited to principal clerks and secretaries or to the principal assistant if the clerk or secretary is unable to attend. The meeting typically occurs in August or September. The location is determined by joint recommendation of the ASLCS Canadian/American Relations Committee and the Canadian Association of Clerks-at-the-Table.

Events

NCSL organizes two annual events for the general membership:

  • NCSL Capitol Forum
  • Legislative Summit (Annual Meeting)

The Legislative Summit is the largest of these events, partly because it occurs in the summer when state legislatures are in recess. Its location varies year to year. The NCSL Capitol Forum alternates between Washington D.C., and a location that varies year to year.

See also

External links