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Public Officials of the Year

"Make no little plans,” the Chicago architect Daniel Burnham once remarked. “They have no magic to stir men’s blood.”

If Burnham, the most famous builder of his era, could meet the 10 men and women being honored as 2018 Public Officials of the Year, he would be pleased. Not a single one among them has little plans or modest goals. They’re focused on very big ideas: providing free college to all; ending the practice of solitary confinement in state prisons; addressing agricultural pollution and the food desert problem in our cities; eliminating all traffic fatalities; making voting accessible and secure for every citizen; stopping opioid overdose deaths; and tackling the culture of sexual harassment within state capitols.

Goalsetting, of course, is the most basic responsibility of any executive. But these 10 honorees didn’t just set goals; they set ambitious, audacious, society-changing goals. Through their hard work, they’re not only accomplishing these goals, but carrying out some of the most striking public policy achievements in the nation today.

For 25 years now, Governing has honored outstanding public officials who have made an indelible impact on the lives of the people they serve. We are pleased to honor the achievements of these 10 dedicated individuals.

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County Executive
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Chief of Police
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Governor
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Abstract misssing
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Chief Information Officer
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Representative
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Governor
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State Senator and State Representative
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Former Planning Director
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Superintendent of Schools
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Performance Artist.
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Trim Waist, Hefty Record.
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On A Roll
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No issue is beyond his realm of interest.
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Luring businesses by improving quality of life.
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Helping all of Philadelphia connect to the Web.
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On a mission to end chronic homelessness.
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A shared-sacrifice approach to expanding health coverage.
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But willing to loan out her management skills.
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Helping cities thrive, not just survive.
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Restoring public confidence in the wake of a scandal.
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Reassuring and rebuilding Mississippi after Katrina.
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Resolution is a valuable commodity in a public official. Rigidity rarely is. Year after year, the men and women honored by Governing magazine are those who can change and adapt--to new issues and circumstances or to the need to take on a whole menu of difficult challenges simultaneously.
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Governor
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General Manager
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Commissioner of Environmental Management