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CONTACT
YOUR LEGISLATURE |
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Contact
Your State Legislature
CONTACTING
YOUR LEGISLATORS
Guidelines for you to follow contacting your legislators in
person, by phone or by letter. Click
here to see a large chart on how
to write an Effective Lobbying Letter.
[Page
1] CLUES TO PROTOCOL
[Page
2] CALIFORNIA
GOVERNMENT GLOSSARY
CLUES
TO PROTOCOL
California
state senator and Assembly members want to hear from their
constituents – you – the voters in their districts. At times
your association may call on you to do some grassroots lobbying.
Often, the contact from a district constituent can sway
a legislator’s vote.
- Be
thoughtful. Commend the right things which your legislator
does. That’s the way you’d like to be treated.
- Be
reasonable. Recognize that there are legitimate differences
of opinion. Never indulge in threats or recriminations.
- Be
realistic. Remember that most controversial legislation
is the result of compromise. Don’t expect that everything
will go your way, and don’t be too critical when it doesn't.
- Be
accurate and factual. The mere fact that you want
or do not want a piece of legislation isn’t enough. If
an issue goes against you, don’t rush to blame the legislator
for "failing to do what you wanted." Make certain you
have the necessary information and do a good job of presenting
your case.
- Be
understanding. Put yourself in a legislator’s place.
Try to understand his/her problems, outlook and aims.
Then you are more likely to help him/her understand your
business and problems.
- Be
friendly. Don’t contact your legislator only when
you want his/her vote. Invite him/her to your place of
business or your group meetings. Take pains to keep in
touch with him/her throughout the year.
- Give
credit where it is due. If an issue goes the way you
wanted, remember that your legislator deserves first credit.
He/she has the vote, not you. And, remember also that
many organizations and individuals participated on your
side.
- Learn
to evaluate issues. The introduction of a legislative
bill doesn’t mean that it will become law. Whether you’re
for or against it, don’t get excited about it until you
learn the who, what and why of it.
- Support
your legislator. If he/she is running for re-election
and if you believe he/she deserves it, give him/her your
support. He/she needs workers and financial supporters.
Don’t become aloof at the time when your legislator needs
your help.
- Don’t,
don’t, don’t even hint that you think certain bills,
campaigns or politics in general are not worthwhile or
may be dishonest.
- Don’t
demand anything. And don’t be rude or threatening.
There is always "the future" and in many cases a legislator
may disagree with you on one issue and be supportive on
another.
- Don’t
be vague or deceptive, righteous or long-winded and
please don’t remind the legislator that your are a taxpayer
and voter in his/her district. (He/she knows it!)
- Don’t
be an extremist. Remember, your legislator represents
all his/her constituents – those you consider liberal
and those you consider conservative. Don’t condemn a legislator
just because he/she supports a piece of legislation that
you think is too liberal or too conservative.
- Don’t
be a busybody. Legislators don’t like to be pestered,
scolded or preached to. Neither do you.
- Be
cooperative. If your legislator makes a reasonable
request, try to comply with it. You can help him/her by
giving him/her the information he/she needs. Don’t back
away for fear you are "getting into politics."
Following
are guidelines for an affective letter:
Letter
Writing
- Be
brief.
- Make
sure the legislator knows this communication is from a
constituent who lives and/or does business in the legislator’s
district.
- Explain
how the proposed legislation affects your business,
and why you support/oppose it.
- Don’t
attempt to give "expert" opinions. Tell how the legislation
would affect your business, based on your
experience and knowledge.
- Refer
to bill numbers whenever possible.
- Ask
for the legislator’s support or opposition.
- Write
the letter without copying any association-provided background
information verbatim.
- Request
that your legislator take a specific action by telling
him/her what you desire. State the facts as you
see them. Avoid emotional arguments. If you use dollar
figures, be realistic.
- Ask
the legislator what his/her position is.
- Keep
all communications friendly and respectful. Be sure to
thank your legislator for considering your views.
- Write
on your personal or business letterhead if possible, and
sign your name over your typed signature at the end of
your message.
- Be
sure your exact return address is on the letter, not just
on the envelope. Envelopes sometimes get thrown away before
the letter is answered.
- Be
reasonable. Don’t ask for the impossible. Don’t threaten.
Don’t say, "I’ll never vote for you unless you do such
and such." That will not help your cause; it may even
harm it.
- Be
constructive. If a bill deals with a problem you admit
exists, but you believe the bill is the wrong approach,
tell what the right approach is.
- Send
your association a copy of your letter and a copy of the
response you receive from your legislator.
- Address
all letters in the following manner, unless you are on
a first name basis:
State
Legislature:
The
Honorable Joe/Jo Doe
California
State Assembly
State
Capitol
Sacramento,
CA 95814
Dear
Assemblyman/woman Doe:
The
Honorable Joe/JO Doe
California
State Senate
State
Capitol
Sacramento,
CA 95814
Dear
Senator Doe:
Local
Elected Officials:
The
Honorable Joe/JO Doe
Councilman/woman,
City
of –
City
Hall
City,
State and Zip Code
Dear
Mr./Ms./Mrs./Miss Doe:
The
Honorable Joe/JO Doe
Supervisor,
-- County
County
Seat
City,
State and Zip Code
Dear
Sir/Madam:
or
Dear
Mr./Ms./Mrs./Miss Doe:
[Page
1] CLUES TO PROTOCOL
[Page
2] CALIFORNIA
GOVERNMENT GLOSSARY
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