National Association of Towns and Townships

The National Association of Towns and Townships (NATaT) is an American lobbying or advocacy group of local government from more than 10,000 communities across the United States.

The Washington, DC–based organization was established 1976, with its founding executive director as Barton Russell.

Russell served in this capacity until 1985 at which time he was appointed President of the National Center for Small Communities – NATaT's policy development and training arm.

NATaT's purpose today, as it was in 1976, is to champion fair-share federal funding decisions and to promote legislative and regulatory policies designed to strengthen grassroots local government.

For more than 40 years NATaT's staff and members have strived to educate lawmakers and other federal officials about the unique nature of small community government operations as well as the need for policies that meet the special needs of suburban and non-metro communities.