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Elizabeth Daigneau

managing editor

Elizabeth Daigneau -- Managing Editor. Elizabeth joined GOVERNING in 2004 as an assistant web editor. In addition to her editing duties, she writes about energy and the environment for the magazine. Before joining GOVERNING, she was the assistant to the editor at Foreign Policy magazine. She graduated from American University in 2002 with a Bachelor of Arts degree in journalism and literature. 

The changes simplify the educational requirements and relieve professionals from unnecessary documentation, officials said. The new rules also are mostly compatible with other states' rules so out-of-state clinicians can work in Vermont.
Cut, color and … condoms? More than a dozen St. Louis barber shops and beauty salons have expanded their services to include education on sexually transmitted diseases.
A new law ensuring police agencies can find whether new officers have ever been fired from other agencies for misconduct will go into effect in 90 days.
General Motors has already begun mapping a site to test the vehicles in Lower Manhattan, according to the governor’s office
Democrat Ralph Northam has led narrowly in most polls, but concerns about his campaign and the ghosts of 2016 have his party feeling anxious.
The last debate between the two major party candidates for governor in New Jersey was heavy on canned attack lines and talking points.
At 24, Atlanta’s new sustainability director has already spent a lifetime in the field. He attributes that to cartoons and his famous family.
Its big and small, Democratic and Republican cities are going green. Other states want to know how.
“Zero waste” and “circular economy” are often used interchangeably.
To survive and prosper, local recycling efforts are forging ways to update, upgrade and educate.