Citizens League Explained

Citizens League
Founded:1952
Type:nonpartisan think tank
Headquarters:St. Paul, MN, United States
Revenue:$1,210,042[1]
Revenue Year:2019
Expenses:$1,194,137
Expenses Year:2019
Website:www.citizensleague.org

The Citizens League is a nonpartisan think tank based in the Minneapolis-St. Paul metropolitan area of Minnesota. It was established in 1952 as a good government advocacy and policy group.

The first Citizens League board of directors was elected on February 14, 1952; the League's first president was Stuart Leck. Dues were $5.

In the past 68 years, the Citizens League has had only nine executive directors: Ray Black (1952–1958); Verne Johnson (1958–1967); Ted Kolderie (1967–1980); Curt Johnson (1980–1991); Lyle Wray (1992–2003); Sean Kershaw (2003–December 1, 2017); Pahoua Yang Hoffman (2017- May 15, 2020); Kate Cimino (2020 – September 2023); and Jake Loesch (2023–Present).

Records

Records of the Citizens League are available for research use. They include minutes (1971-1981), correspondence, reports (1958-1984), subject files, notebooks, financial information, and printed materials.[2]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Citizens League . Foundation Center . 4 April 2017 .
  2. http://www.mnhs.org/library/findaids/00164.xml Citizens League Records