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Meeting with A Member of Congress
Requesting a meeting with your member of Congress:
- Find your Congressional
District and contact information on the NASW Web site:

- Send a
fax or e-mail to the scheduler requesting a meeting
- Include the
date and time of day you would like to meet with the member
- Offer
to meet with staff if the member of Congress is not available
(i.e. Health Legislative Assistant)
- Include the name of the legislation
or issue you would like to discuss (i.e. re-authorization
of the Ryan White
CARE Act)
- Provide a phone number and/or e-mail address
where the scheduler can reach you
- Follow up with a phone call
in one week if you have not heard back from the office
At the Meeting
- Be on time. Staff in most Capitol Hill and district offices
are busy and work on tight schedules. Remember that their time
is valuable.
- Establish a rapport. After introductions and handshakes,
talk about things or relationships you might have in common.
For instance,
maybe you have a mutual friend, or perhaps you both went to the
same elementary school. Thank your senator or representative
for all that he or she does on Capitol Hill to represent your state
or district.
- Select a spokesperson. If several people will attend
the meeting, select a spokesperson. If everyone there will have
a role, select
one person to move the meeting along in a timely manner.
- State
your purpose. For example, you might say, "Congressman
Lee, we are here to talk with you about welfare reauthorization.
Our professional association, the National Association of
Social Workers, would like to have your support for its recommendations
to improve the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity
Reconciliation Act."
- Make the issue real. Personalize the
results of the legislation. For example, relate your own story
about the debt you are
incurring in graduate school and the need for loan forgiveness for child
welfare workers.
- Paint the little picture, as well as the
big picture. After you discuss how the issue has affected you
or someone you serve,
provide statistics on how it affects people in the district, state, or
country. Legislators are people; they are sympathetic to
stories about real people.
- Make a clear request. Tell your member of Congress
exactly what you would like him or her to do, and do not leave
without
learning the legislator’s position on your issue. For example, you
might say that you would like your legislator to vote for
legislation that would provide equal pay for equal work. Then, ask the member
or their staff to outline the legislator’s current
position.
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