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Matches in DBpedia 2014 for { ?s ?p David Crane (born December 24, 1953, Denver, Colorado)[citation needed] is an American lecturer in Public Policy at Stanford University and Research Scholar at the Stanford Institute For Economic Policy Research. He is also president and co-founder of Govern For California and a member of the State Budget Crisis Task Force co-chaired by former Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker and former New York State Lieutenant Governor Richard Ravitch. Previously he served as special advisor to California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger from 2004 to 2010 and as a partner at Babcock & Brown, a financial services company, from 1979 to 2003.Crane graduated from Cherry Creek High School in suburban Denver, Colorado in 1971,[citation needed] the University of Michigan in 1975, and the University of California, Hastings College of the Law, in 1980.Crane also serves as a director of Building America’s Future, California Common Sense, and the University of California Investment Advisory Group and is a member of the Society of Actuaries Blue Ribbon Panel formed to explore the causes of underfunding in public pension plans. Previously he served as a Regent of the University of California and as a director of the California State Teachers Retirement System, the California High Speed Rail Authority, and the California Economic Development Commission.Crane has written extensively and been cited often on the subjects of government accounting, pension funding, government finance and investment policies, political reform and state governance. In 2006 the California Legislature removed him from the board of the California State Teachers Retirement System after he questioned the system's reporting of pension liabilities and assumptions about future investment earnings [1]. In 2011 his term as a UC Regent was allowed to lapse without confirmation by the California Legislature after he expressed concerns that state funding of higher education was jeopardized in part by the failure to properly account for and pre-fund public employee pensions [2] [3].. }

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