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Contacting Elected Federal Government
Officials
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Oakland District
Office |
Washington DC Office |
The 9th District
Albany
City of Albany (official site)
Map of Albany
Albany Unified School District
Berkeley
City of Berkeley (official site)
Map of Berkeley
Berkeley Unified School District
Berkeley Chamber of Commerce
Berkeley Convention and Visitors Center
Alameda County
Alameda County (official site)
Alameda County Office of Education
Castro Valley
Castro Valley
Castro Valley Unified School District
Emeryville
City of Emeryville (official site)
Map of Emeryville
Emery Unified School District
Oakland
City of Oakland (official site)
Map of Oakland
Oakland Unified School District
Oakland Chamber of Commerce
Oakland Convention and Visitors Bureau
Piedmont
City of Piedmont (official site)
Map of Piedmont
Piedmont Unified School District
Other U.S. Representatives:
Write
Your Representative-From the House of
Representatives website, use this page to find your
representative and send him or her an email.
Congressional Directory-From the Government Printing Office, use this page when you know your representatives name.
For California: Barbara Boxer and
Diane Feinstein
The Honorable Barbara Boxer
Website:
http://boxer.senate.gov/
Webform:
http://boxer.senate.gov/contact/email/
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San Francisco Office |
Washington DC Office |
The Honorable Diane Feinstein
Website:
http://feinstein.senate.gov/
Webform:
http://feinstein.senate.gov/email.html
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San Francisco Office |
Washington DC Office |
Tips for Contacting an Elected Official
Letters, emails, and faxes are effective ways to communicate with your elected officials. Below are some tips on contacting and communicating with your elected official.
1. Be Original- Consider writing your own original correspondence. While many organizations can provide you a pre-written letter or postcard that you simply sign, many legislators consider a thoughtful, original letter from a constituent worth 1000 of the pre-written letters. Feel free to use a pre-written letter as a base and expand on it with your own words.
2. Stay Brief- The maximum length of a letter/email should be 1 page. Keep in mind that the letter will probably be read by a legislative aid, so a brief letter is best.
3. State Who You Are and What You are Writing About- Identify yourself as a constituent and why you are writing in the first place first paragraph. This will keep your letter brief. However, refrain from using the lines like "As a citizen and a taxpayer..." Also, if you know the House or Senate Bill by name or bill number state it in the first paragraph.
4.Personalize Your Letter/Email- If the legislation you are writing about will affect you personally, tell the legislator about it. Write a brief personal story about what the legislation will/will not do for you and/or your community.
5.Personalize Your Relationship- The more you can personalize your relationship with the legislator, the stronger your letter/email will be. If you voted for the legislator, worked on his/her campaign, or donated money to the legislator or their party, say so. If you ever met the legislator, briefly mention this in your letter.
6. Be Respectful- The easiest way to not have your letter read is to be disrespectful. "Dear Idiot" will probably send your letter to the garbage, however taking a firm position on an issue is fine. Do not use profanity. Even if your legislator is not the person you voted for, remember to be respectful.
7. Include Your Address in Your Signature, Even in Email- Legislators are busy people and you should also never demand a response. However some legislators will take the time to write back, but they cannot if you do not include your address. Including your address also affirms the fact that you are a constituent.
8 Follow up- After you have contacted your elected official, follow up on what they did. If he/she voted the way you wanted, consider contacting them to thank him/her. If your legislator did not vote the way you wanted, consider contacting them and respectfully express your disappointment. In any follow-up letter/email, mention the fact that you wrote him/her before the vote was taken.