Mission

The Court Services and Offender Supervision Agency for the District of Columbia (CSOSA) is a Federal, Executive branch agency, created by Congress in 1997 to perform the offender supervision function for D.C. Code offenders. It does so in coordination with the Superior Court of the District of Columbia and the U.S. Parole Commission. CSOSA's mission is to increase public safety, prevent crime, reduce recidivism, and support the fair administration of justice in close collaboration with the community. With a budget of $140 million and nearly 1,000 employees, CSOSA provides community supervision to 15,000 individuals on probation, parole or supervised release each day.

United_States_Department_of_Education


Outlays (in millions of dollars)

US_Department_of_Education_Outlay_Line_Graph

 

Year Outlay Year Outlay Year Outlay
1962   1991   2020 232
1963   1992   2021 224
1964   1993   2022 234
1965   1994   2023 261
1966   1995   2024 274*
1967   1996   2025 304*
1968   1997   2026 316*
1969   1998   2027 324*
1970   1999 57 2028 331*
1971   2000 66 2029 339*
1972   2001 113    
1973   2002 129    
1974   2003 140    
1975   2004 167    
1976   2005 174    
1977   2006 162    
1978   2007 169    
1979   2008 184    
1980   2009 201    
1981   2010 210    
1982   2011 206    
1983   2012 214    
1984   2013 207    
1985   2014 196    
1986   2015 210    
1987   2016 216    
1988   2017 235    
1989   2018 244    
1990   2019 243    
Source *estimate

Employee Counts

US_Department_of_Education_Employee_Count_Line_Graph

 

Year Count Year Count Year Count
1962   1991   2020 1,063
1963   1992   2021 1,033
1964   1993   2022 1,035
1965   1994   2023 1,036
1966   1995   2024 1,016
1967   1996      
1968   1997      
1969   1998      
1970   1999      
1971   2000 783    
1972   2001 860    
1973   2002 915    
1974   2003 987    
1975   2004 1,054    
1976   2005 1,082    
1977   2006 1,140    
1978   2007 1,150    
1979   2008 1,186    
1980   2009 1,245    
1981   2010 1,252    
1982   2011 1,243    
1983   2012 1,237    
1984   2013 1,218    
1985   2014 1,181    
1986   2015 1,160    
1987   2016 1,165    
1988   2017 1,171    
1989   2018 1,132    
1990   2019 1,099    
Source