Tennessee Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations

The Tennessee Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations (TACIR) is an intergovernmental body of state and local governments in the U.S. state of Tennessee that has the purpose of providing a forum for discussion and resolution of intergovernmental problems and providing research support to improve the overall quality of government in that state. TACIR was established as a permanent nonpartisan body in 1978 by action of the Tennessee General Assembly. [1][2]

Tennessee was one of several states that formed commissions on intergovernmental relations, patterned to some extent on the United States Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations, during the 1970s and 1980s. [3]

The commission has 25 members, including 10 members and one appointee of the state legislature, 10 officials from local governments, two officials of the executive branch of the state government, and two private citizens. The legislative members are the chairmen of the Finance, Ways and Means committees of the two houses of the General Assembly, the Comptroller of the Treasury, four additional members of the Tennessee House of Representatives and four additional members of the Tennessee State Senate appointed to four-year terms. The local government members, all of whom are appointed to four-year terms, are four elected county officials, four elected municipal officials, one member nominated by the County Officials Association of Tennessee, and one member nominated by the state's development districts.[4]

References

  1. Mission, TACIR website, accessed December 29, 2016
  2. Rodney E. Stanley and P. Edward French (2007), Tennessee's John S. Wilder: The longest tenured state legislator in Tennessee history, University Press of America. Page 32.
  3. Richard Cole (2010), The State of State Advisory Commissions on Intergovernmental Relations: Do They Continue to Have a Role in the U.S. Federal System?, The Book of the States 2010, pages 36-44. The Council of State Governments website, retrieved April 19, 2011.
  4. Organization, TACIR website, accessed December 29, 2016
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