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National Association of Legislative Information Technology
Newsletter Winter 2004
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Inside this Issue:
Chair's Corner
Experiences in moving a server room
The NALIT Survey
Editor's Corner
Recap of 2003 NALIT seminar
Nevada’s web captioning project
NALIT logo competition
2004 Executive Committee Officers
2004 Executive Committee Directors
2004 Committees
NALIT
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Chair's Corner
By Maryann Trauger
NALIT Chair
mtrauger@state.nd.us
The 2003 Professional Development Seminar at Harrisburg is past, but
great memories continue and the taste of chocolate lingers. A very special
thanks to Todd Jewell and his staff in Pennsylvania, to the planning committee
members, and, of course, to Pam Greenberg, NCSL Liaison to NALIT. The NALIT
Professional Development Seminars (PDS) are absolutely one of the best
places to gain knowledge in our very specialized legislative environments
and to network with others who have legislative experiences to share.
As this year’s NALIT chair, I am a member of the Legislative Staff Coordinating
Committee (LSCC) of NCSL. Todd Jewell, Pennsylvania, as vice chair, is
a member also. We attend quarterly meetings and participate on task forces.
NALIT is particularly well represented in LSCC at the moment with Jim Greenwalt,
Minnesota, as LSCC Staff Vice Chair and Sharon Crouch Steidel, Virginia,
and Michael Adams, Colorado, as at-large legislative staff members. Does
it get any better than this?
Michael Adams, Colorado, is also our Past Chair, so that current issues
and concerns of NALIT members are uniquely represented at NCSL. The other
members of the Executive Committee are Todd Jewell, Pennsylvania, who advanced
to Vice Chair and Andy Kraus, Kansas, our new Secretary and Newsletter
Editor. Three of our directors are in their second year of service: Scott
Darnall, South Dakota; Gary Schaefer, Louisiana; and Gary Wieman, Nebraska.
They are joined by three new directors: Rick Johnson, Washington; Jonathon
Palmore, Virginia; and Janet Sullivan, Texas. These members are committed
to NALIT and to serving you and their work is essential to the functioning
of NALIT and very much appreciated.
No matter what the topic was, the presentations and training at the
PDS really addressed change and adjusting to change. In information technology,
as you are well aware, change is constant. Working in the field of legislative
information technology means that we must initiate and manage change to
the benefit of our individual legislatures.
The best place to find out how other states manage change is NALIT.
I encourage you to use the listserv. You will have 200 advisors who can
share their experiences, good and bad, and save you a great deal of time
and money. In addition, the NALIT web page has information that is absolutely
invaluable. The technology survey, which will be revised and updated in
the future to provide even more information, and the NALIT newsletter articles,
are just two areas of information available to you without leaving your
office and without spending hours of research. I also urge you to check
out the handouts from the PDS that are now available on the web.
Your involvement, whether it is a listserv response, as a committee
member, or as a director or officer, is what makes NALIT strong. Every
member is important and every member is needed for NALIT to continue to
be the successful staff section that it is. If you have any ideas, suggestions,
questions, or anything that you think will make NALIT even better, or want
to volunteer, please contact me. Looking forward to visiting with you in
Salt Lake City, if not before.
Top
Location, Location,
Location. . .
Thoughts and experiences to contemplate before moving your server room
By Jim Schratz
Arkansas
Jim@arkleg.state.ar.us
Four years ago, new heating and cooling air handlers, duct work and
zone thermostats were installed to provide central heat and air for the
basement through second floors of the south wing of the Arkansas capitol
building. The system is computer controlled and supposedly state of the
art, however, the software operating system, at version 1.0, is quirky
and just a tad bit buggy, if you know what I mean. About two years ago,
while the Arkansas Senate was undergoing an extensive renovation of its
chamber and offices, a number of problems began to surface regarding the
electrical power within the south wing of our capitol. An old fused and
melted electrical breaker panel was discovered, with a metal fish tape
in a conduit – and the panel was still “live!” Additional investigations
revealed that the main power entrance for that wing was not grounded. A
year and a half ago a contract was let to completely tear out and replace
the south steps leading into the capitol building. Water had been leaking
into the basement for more than 20 years and four or five attempts to “fix
the flat roof” nearby had proved fruitless. During heavy rains, up to 1
inch of water would accumulate in the southeast corridor of the basement.
These real examples can showcase the problems of working in a 100 year
old historic building, where form has often taken precedent over substance,
when it comes to the health, upkeep and modernization of the building.
Given the fact that the Arkansas General Assembly’s server room was located
in the southeast corner of the basement, I became an avid hanger-on to
any and all new construction and renovation projects about which I heard.
Do you know the potential effects of improperly grounded electrical
current on the transmission rates of packets over a TCP/IP network architecture?
Listen for the sound of a toilet flushing for the answer! Temperature fluctuations
of 25- 30 degrees in a server room are unhealthy for the systems, especially
fiber channel controllers. Pooled water in a corridor 20 feet from my server
room door left me weak-kneed.
With about a million dollars worth of equipment on the line, I began
to talk realistically with my director about finding a safer, more environmentally-friendly
location, in which to move our main servers into – outside of the capitol
building. Heightened security measures for capitol buildings following
9/11 gave additional weight to my arguments. The continuing expansion of
our legislative research staff also has highlighted space constraints within
a building where space is forever being fought over.
The biggest hurdle to cross was how to connect the servers, from an
offsite location, back to the capitol. The security, reliability and cost
of the connection were the three main considerations for this part of my
plan. A new state-owned office building a block and a half from the capitol
was under construction. Our state treasury was committed to moving their
item processing shop in there. The legislative audit division was planning
to move their server room and computer system’s auditors to the new building.
Both of these agencies were looking for a way to maintain connectivity
with their main offices in the capitol building. I met with deputy directors
from both agencies and proposed a joint project to install our own fiber
from the capitol building, through another state-owned building which sat
between them, and into the almost finished new building. They agreed to
the joint venture.
Eleven months, one engineering firm, two architectural firms, the massive
headache of a bid and let contract process, and one contractor later, we
had 48 strands of dark, multimode fiber available for connectivity. During
this time, we also added our Secretary of State’s office to the venture.
They had personnel in the office building located between the capitol and
the newly constructed one. The total project cost about $78,000. The three
original agencies split this cost and the Secretary of State provided personnel
and labor in lieu of money. [Our state’s Department of Information Services
– an executive branch agency – had offered their network for connectivity
purposes, at a projected price tag of about $3,500 a month, per location,
per agency, per connection. We chose to proceed on our own.]
Once the connectivity issues were solved, finding a new location for
our server room turned out to be about the easiest step in the process.
Space in the middle building, right across the street from the capitol,
became available. There was just one slight problem, though; we were about
10 weeks away from our biennial session. Was it possible to get the office
space renovated, special air conditioners and an electrical upgrade installed,
plan the actual move of the servers and have all systems ready for session?
I set a target date of Friday, December 13, 2002 as the drop-dead move
date, giving us one month before the start of our session. After a furious
three days of meetings with the building’s leasing agent and engineers,
it was decided that the target date was achievable, although there was
no room for delays. I then met with my director. Having been kept informed
of all progress during the previous year, he agreed to my moving of the
server room, plus the networking and programming staffs into the available
office space outside of the capitol building.
We signed the lease the first week of November.
Everything went according to plan. We located and hired a local moving
company that had solid references from several companies whose computer
equipment they had moved. At 5 p.m., 12/13/2002, we shut down the network,
began unplugging what seemed like miles of cables, wrapped each network
component in a blanket, loaded them into specially designed wooden carts,
secured them with tie downs and loaded them into a moving truck. At 1:07
a.m., 12/14/2002, we turned out the lights in our new offices and left
the building. The network was back up, with all servers functioning as
they were supposed to function. It’s amazing what a great job a well-trained
and dedicated staff can accomplish even with short notice. I owe a tremendous
kudos to my entire staff for a job most well done.
This move was really just the first step in a long range business continuity
plan (BCP) we are working towards. And, it does highlight many of the problems
and issues that we all may face when working within the confines of an
historic and guarded state capitol building. I do love working in and around
our capitol building and it definitely makes my work more interesting,
although there are days I wish it were newer, more modern and more open
to the changes the information technology field can sometime hope for.
It’s all in location...
Top
Revive the NALIT Survey
By Sharon Crouch Steidel
Virginia House of Delegates
scrouch@house.state.va.us
At least once a week, a question is posted to the NALIT listserv asking
what states are using a particular product or how states are handling certain
issues. Wouldn’t it be great if we had a searchable database concerning
technology uses for all 50 states at our fingertips? This line of thought
is the genesis for NALIT’s 50-state survey that was created in 2001.
In an effort to provide a comprehensive tool to NALIT members and others,
the database was created and posted on the NALIT website. The survey itself
is organized into nine sections: Contact Information, Software, Document
Management, Hardware & Networking, Chamber Systems, Voting, Video &
Media, VPN/PDAs, and Web Site.
As time has passed, I must confess the survey has collected a little
dust on it, which is why I am pleased that Maryann has created a Survey
Committee and that Andy has asked me to write this article. The potential
for this database is vast but it does require regular oversight by us all.
Many of the survey responses have not been updated since 2001 and the survey
form itself needs to reflect newer software versions. And yet, over the
past month, we have had over 3000 hits on this database. Please take a
few minutes and review the response(s) from your state. This will require
a user name and password, which you can get from me at scrouch@house.state.va.us
or from Pam Greenberg at Pam.Greenberg@ncsl.org.
I am excited about the potential improvements we can make to this tool
in the upcoming months and years. If you have suggestions or thoughts about
the survey, please share them or even better – volunteer to work on the
Survey Committee!
The survey can be accessed from the NALIT home page (http://www.ncsl.org/programs/lis/nalit/nalithmp.htm),
or directly at http://house.state.va.us/litsurvey.nsf.
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Editor’s Corner
By Andy Kraus
NALIT Secretary
AndyK@LAS.state.ks.us
I want to say a big THANKS to everyone who submitted articles for this
edition of the NALIT newsletter. I feel very fortunate to have this opportunity
to spread news from other states to the NALIT membership. I’m already starting
to assemble the next newsletter, so if you would like to share any news
from your state, please let me know! It’s a safe bet that there will be
somebody out here who is interested to read about your current goings-on.
As a further bribe, in keeping with recent tradition I am offering a “gift
from Kansas” to anyone who submits an article...don’t worry, I won’t send
you any Kansas snow (or tornadoes)!
Top
2003 NALIT PDS…Still
Recovering!
By Todd Jewell
NALIT Vice Chair
TJewell@pahouse.net
It’s been well over two months since the end of the PDS and I must tell
you, I am still recovering. But, more than recovering, I have to admit
I am still beaming with happiness and overjoyed with the fact that everything
went as planned and all my wonderful guests had a worthwhile experience.
For those of you who could not make it, I offer this tiny little article
that will give you a small window of background and overview of the events
of the week (and maybe make you a little jealous).
The process started over two years ago. I remember sitting in front
of Michael Adams and Jim Greenwalt at the annual meeting in San Antonio.
They blitzed me with tough RIGOROUS questions on why PA should be considered
for the PDS…I barely escaped with my life. They graciously, and probably
hesitantly, approved my bid to host the PDS in 2003. Once I heard the news
it started my wheels spinning right away on what to do.
The 2002 conference was held in Reno Nevada, hosted by my good friend
Allan Smith. As I strolled through the aisles of the Nugget Casino I could
not fathom how I was going to build a better PDS than this. As many of
you know we started “lobbying” for PA in Reno, by handing out goody bags
full of PA culture such as Hershey chocolate, Martins chips, Just Born
candies, Tastycakes, and many other donated PA treats. Our hopes were to
“addict” everyone to the chocolate so they would consider coming to PA
the following year for a “fix.” But how was I going to top a casino??
With the Reno PDS over, and my staff still sore from all the money they
contributed to the casino owner’s retirement funds, we had 365 days to
prepare for our PDS. It seemed like FOREVER, but boy did the time fly.
We started our initial preparation just days after returning. We began
contacting and reserving many of the folks targeted to present and attend.
Things really started to heat up in August and September and my staff did
a PHENOMENAL job finalizing every detail. Then, it was here.
Joy of joy, the PDS was finally upon us! All of our planning finally
coming to fruition. The conference was held October 1 – 5 and our guests
began arriving on Wednesday, for the first day. My fellow IT friends from
all over the USA and some new friends from Canada were in attendance. Even
the staff from North Carolina made it back this year. Thanks guys! A BIG
kudos to Tim Rice, he and his wife drove in from Springfield, IL (everyone
remembers where that is right?!) on his own dollar. Now that is commitment,
or, that chocolate fix must have really gotten to him!
The first day featured a full day of specialized training. Topics dealt
with SPAM (Sean Johnson “wowed” the crowd as usual) and a Windows vs. Linux
showdown. One of my hard working, outstanding local vendors, NetComm Solutions,
sponsored the evening event held at the National Civil War Museum, which
included a tour of the museum and a fantastic dinner which was complimented
by a wonderful harpist.
The second day of the conference started with Craig Zablocki’s Positively
Humor seminar that is nationally applauded. That was a real treat. I was
lucky enough to be “involved’ in the presentation but that is another story
for another article. The sessions for the day covered great technical aspects
from customer service to IT Investments. Our guests were given time during
lunch to talk with the different vendors and view their IT wares. The afternoon
session featured a roundtable discussion of IT issues and solutions from
around the country. Compaq/ HP sponsored the evening reception at the Whitaker
Center which included a tour of the Harsco Science Center and an IMAX movie
called the Human Body.
On Friday, the day started with Ben Franklin regaling our guests with
PA history and how his humble IT beginnings of technology were the catalyst
for such huge strides in technology today. He made comparisons from what
he saw during his time and what he sees now. Sessions on Friday included
technology staffing and good organizational techniques as well as sessions
on web casting and looks into the IT future. Lunch again allowed time for
vendor exhibits from different companies. The afternoon Management Track
provided time for sessions on institutionalizing IT as part of a “traditional”
legislative staff structure. The Technical Track featured a session on
tools and techniques with web design using different media including audio,
video and different programs. The Friday evening event, Taste of PA, was
our “Crown Jewell” reception of the conference. It was sponsored by my
good friends at Lexmark Corporation. The event was held in our magnificent
Capitol Rotunda and our guests were treated to food and culture from around
the state. Each vendor came with their specialized products. We offered
cheese steaks from Pat Steaks in Philadelphia, the famous Primanti Brothers
sandwich from Pittsburgh, confectionery delights from Hershey, local beers
and wines provided by ABC Brewery and some Pennsylvania Dutch desserts
from Hitz’s Farm Market. Local Pennsylvania musicians and a magician performed
as well. Of course, Ben Franklin showed up for the party; he can never
turn down a cheese steak or to pose for a picture or two.
Saturday the attendees chose between a tour of the Gettysburg battlegrounds
and the Hershey Gardens and Outlets. Everyone ended the evening at Hershey’s
Chocolate World were they were treated to the Hershey 3D movie, the famous
Chocolate World ride and a fantastic dinner. Heaven forbid I let our guests
depart PA without a visit to the “Sweetest Place on Earth!”
Sunday our remaining guests attended a session provided by Tony Stanco
from the Center of Open Source and Government and then finalized their
conference with a tour of our beautiful capitol and our IT facilities.
Wow, what a week, but a wise man once said, “All good things must come
to an end,” and sure enough it did.
It is hard to believe that our PDS is over and we start preparing for
the annual meeting in Utah and the PDS in Burlington, VT. Duncan Goss will
be our esteemed host in Burlington and I very much look forward to visiting
his beautiful state. He has some wonderful things planned for us that cannot
be missed!
Lastly, I want to close this little window into our PDS with some thanks.
To my staff, you were top notch (as usual) and I appreciate every one of
you and everything you did. To Pam and Becky, our NCSL syndicate, thanks
for EVERYTHING you did and continue to do to keep NALIT running like a
well-oiled machine. To my PDS Planning Committee members, thanks so much
for the ideas, insight and incredible agenda we put together. To my vendors,
thank you very much for helping me turn my vision into reality. Last but
not least, many, many thanks to my guests. Without you, none of this was
possible.
Have a great winter everyone and hope to see you in Utah!
Top
Nevada Legislature
Develops Web Captioning System for the Hearing Impaired
While technology can provide some elegant solutions, cost is still a major
factor
By Andy Harvey
Nevada Legislature
aharvey@lcb.state.nv.us
Arguably, the single biggest reason the Internet has grown so rapidly
in the past decade is that it makes vast amounts of information accessible
to people regardless of time or location. The challenge for the future
is to make that information available to the broadest range of people,
including those with various physical limitations. Because it can make
vital information available to its citizens, government should be a leader
in this field. The concept is obvious and important, but its execution
can be complex and costly.
The Nevada legislative website has followed the Bobby guidelines for
several years now, and is Bobby Priority 1 compliant. This standard, however,
seems to favor the visually impaired, in part because the Internet is text
oriented. As with most legislatures, a priority for the Nevada legislative
website is the audio/video broadcasting of committee hearings and floor
meetings. This can raise issues for the hearing impaired. This past year,
we were contacted by the Nevada Deaf and Hard of Hearing Advocacy Resource
Center asking if we would work with them to find ways to make our Internet
broadcasts more accessible. This request led to the development of our
new system.
Our system is based on court reporters utilizing stenograph machines.
The spoken words in a meeting are typed into a stenograph. The text is
then sent over the Internet to an outside company that converts the stenograph
text into electronic, Internet-ready text, and sends it back to us via
the Internet. We are able to post that text next to the Internet broadcast
on one web page as follows:
The font style and size can be selected and the font color and background
color can be set by the user. This allows each user to select the settings
that are most comfortable for them. Having the video and text side by side
on one web page makes it easier for the reader to see (via the video) who
is speaking. It also allows them to see any graphics that may be a part
of the meeting that the camera can zoom in on.
This arrangement represents an ideal version for the captioning of meetings
via the Internet, but there are significant issues that it raises. The
primary issue is cost. A court stenographer can charge $100 - $150 dollars
per hour. The outside company that converts the stenograph text to make
it Internet ready can charge $75.00 - $100 per hour. At these rates, it
quickly became clear to us that a goal of captioning all meetings in their
entirety would be cost prohibitive. But, at least in our state, it may
not be necessary. At this time, the Nevada Legislature will provide a “signer”
at any committee meeting at the request of a hearing impaired person. The
cost is about $50 per hour. We have only a few requests per year. Our first
regular usage of the electronic captioning will probably work in a similar
manner. We will only caption meetings that are requested. While this will
greatly reduce the cost, cost will still be a significant factor. We hope
to devise a plan that will see the legislature pay some of the cost, and
we are open to finding a corporate or foundation sponsor that can pay some
of the cost. We would be willing to put a sponsor’s logo or mention on
our website.
Another issue that has come up is timing the electronic text to the
electronic video. The outside company that converts the electronic text
can set it to be in sync with the video it sees on the Internet broadcast.
That works fine. But the issue that can create a delay is the buffering
of the broadcast on an individual’s machine. Buffering can be affected
by Internet data speed and the processing speed of the user’s computer.
While this can cause a sync issue of 10 or 15 seconds, the system still
seems to work well enough.
We have also had discussions on whether we should allow users to save
the electronic text that is sent to their screen. Having a transcript of
a meeting that is instant and accurate to the level of a court reporter
at first seems ideal. In Nevada, however, this will not be allowed. By
statute, the official record of any legislative meeting is the minutes.
The purpose of the minutes in Nevada is primarily to record the intent
of a committee. An exact transcript of a meeting does not address intent.
So viewers will be allowed to see the text over the Internet, but not save
it.
Finally, the way the text is provided over the Internet and on our website
is by use of JavaScript and a cookie. It becomes important that privacy
policies indicate this.
One frequent question we are asked is if we have tested voice translation
software so that a court reporter is not needed. We have. The issue with
voice recognition is that it “learns” one person’s voice to become more
accurate. Obviously, in the legislative environment, there are many speakers
in many meetings, so voice recognition software is not nearly accurate
enough. We considered training one person who could repeat everything spoken
in a meeting, but even then, the level of accuracy was not high enough.
Given all the issues this project has brought forward, we still think
it is a highly useful system and testing with our hearing-impaired users
shows they agree. We believe it is a system that can be refined and made
useful here and one that can be copied and used in other states as well.
Top
NALIT Logo Competition
Results in Tie
By Pam Greenberg
NCSL
pam.greenberg@ncsl.org
At the suggestion of several NALIT members at the NCSL Annual Meeting
this year, NALIT Chair Maryann Trauger posted a message to the NALIT listserv
requesting the membership to submit new designs for the NALIT logo.
Twelve submissions were received, and the logos were printed on ballots
for members to vote on at the seminar. NALIT’s current logo was also included
on the ballot.
The voting resulted in a tie between the current (original) version
(designed by Sharon Crouch Steidel and her staff at the Virginia House
of Delegates) and one submitted by Guillermo Cordon of Louisiana. Given
some basic similarities in the designs of both logos, Maryann Trauger appointed
a committee to look at combining the best elements of each logo in a new
version. The new logo will accompany a new look on the NALIT Web site,
which is undergoing a redesign as part of an NCSL-wide Web site redesign.
2004 Executive Committee Officers
Chair
Maryann Trauger
Information Technology
Coordinator
Legislative Council
State Capitol, 600 E. Boulevard
Bismarck, ND 58505
Voice: (701) 328-2916
Fax: (701) 328-3615
mtrauger@state.nd.us
Secretary
Andy Kraus
Senior Network Administrator
Legislature
300 SW 10th Ave.
Suite 529-S
Topeka , KS 66612
Voice: 785-296-2610
AndyK@LAS.state.ks.us |
Vice-Chair
Todd A. Jewell
Director
House Democratic Information
Technologies
Main Capitol, Room 613
House Box 202249
Harrisburg, PA 17120-2249
Voice: (717) 783-2844
tjewell@pahouse.net
Past Chair
Michael P. Adams
Director
Legislative Information Services
Colorado General Assembly
200 E. 14th Ave. #023
Denver, CO 80203
Voice: (303) 866-6412
michael.adams@state.co.us |
2004 Executive Committee Directors
Scott Darnall
Programmer/Analyst
Legislative Research Council
500 East Capitol
Pierre, SD 57501-5070
Voice: (605) 773-4296
scott.darnall@state.sd.us
Jonathan Palmore
Information Systems Director
Senate
P.O. Box 396
Richmond, VA 23218
Voice: (804) 698-7410
jpalmore@sov.state.va.us
Janet Sullivan
Applications Project Manager
Texas Legislative Council
P.O. Box 12128
Capitol Station
Austin, TX 78711-2128
Phone: (512) 463-6622
janet.sullivan@tlc.state.tx.us |
Rick Johnson
Senior Software Engineer
Legislative Service Center
2404 Chandler Court SW
Olympia, WA 98502-603
Voice: (360) 786-7000
johnson_ri@leg.wa.gov
Gary Schaefer
Info Systems Coordinator
Senate
P.O. Box 94183
Baton Rouge, LA 70804
Voice: (225) 342-1001
schaefeg@legis.state.la.us
Gary Wieman
Network Manager
Legislative Technology Center
1445 K St., Rm. 359
P.O. Box 94604
Lincoln, NE 68509-4604
Voice: (402) 471-6210
gwieman@unicam.state.ne.us |
2004 Committees
Outreach and Newcomers’ Welcome Committee:
Todd Jewell, PA, Chair
Lorie Johnson, AR
Craig Nakahara, HI
Dave Larson, KS
Tim Lowry, KY
Gary Wieman, NE
Janet Sullivan, TX
Web Page Award Exploratory Committee:
Gary Wieman, NE
NALIT Co-chair
Mitch McCartney
LINCS Co-chair
Wayne Lesperance, PA
Scott Darnall, SD
Mitchell P. Goldstein, VA
Web Page Advisory Committee:
Andy Harvey, NV, Chair
Lorie Johnson, AR
Cordon Guillermo, LA
Sharon Crouch Steidel, VA
Rick Johnson, WA
Nichole Dillon, WY
Information Technology Survey Committee:
Allan Smith, NV, Co-chair
Harold Berkowitz, NJ, Co-Chair
Ann McLaughlin, DE
Jenny Wilhelm, FL
George Yeager, OH
Jonathon Palmore, VA
Sharon Crouch Steidel, VA
Patty Wells, WY |
2004 Annual Meeting Planning Committee:
Maryann Trauger, ND, Chair
Mark Allred, UT
Michael Adams, CO
Andy Kraus, KS
Gary Schaefer, LA
Gary Wieman, NE
Todd Jewell, PA
Scott Darnall, SD
Janet Sullivan, TX
Jonathon Palmore, VA
Rick Johnson, WA
2004 PDS Planning Committee:
Duncan Goss, VT, Chair
Lisa Wilcox, VT
Ann McLaughlin, DE
Andy Kraus, KS
Gary Schaefer, LA
Todd Jewell, PA
Lou Adamson, SD
Scott Darnall, SD
Maryann Trauger, ND
2004 Nominating Committee:
Gary Schaefer, LA, Chair
Michael Adams, CO
Jim Swain, KY
2004 NALIT Legislative Staff
Achievement Awards:
Allan Smith, NV
Ann McLaughlin, DE
National Conference of State Legislatures
7700 East First Place, Denver, CO 80230
303-364-7700 |
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