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Advocacy for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention. Fran C. Wheeler Chronic Disease Directors wheeler@chronicdisease.org. Topics for Discussion. Overview of Legislative Process Influencing Appropriations Basic Rules for Advocacy A Call to Action. How a Bill Becomes Law.
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Advocacy for Heart Disease and Stroke Prevention Fran C. Wheeler Chronic Disease Directors wheeler@chronicdisease.org
Topics for Discussion • Overview of Legislative Process • Influencing Appropriations • Basic Rules for Advocacy • A Call to Action
How a Bill Becomes Law • Bill Introduction • Subcommittee Action • Committee Action • Floor Action • Conference Committee • Presidential Action
HOUSE Energy & Commerce Health Appropriations Labor, HHS, Ed SENATE Health, Education, Labor & Pensions Public Health Appropriations Labor, HHS, Ed Traditional Committees for Public Health Advocacy
Other Committees for HDSP Advocacy • Agriculture, Nutrition & Forestry • Armed Forces • Budget • Commerce, Science & Transportation • Energy & Natural Resources • Environment and Public Works • Veterans’ Affairs
Funding for HDSP Initiatives • Budget Formulation • President’s Budget • Congressional Budget • Legislative Appropriations
Budget Formulation • June – November • Agency (CDC) • Department (DHHS) • Office of Management & Budget (OMB)
President’s Budget • First Monday in February • State of the Union Address • Budget request to Congress
Congressional Budget • April 15 Budget resolution • Framework for total spending, based on revenue • Mandatory vs. discretionary • Allocations to Appropriations Committee • 13 subcommittees
Legislative Appropriations • October 1 = new fiscal year • Full Approps Committees (X2) • Subcommittees (x 13) • Full Approps Committee (x 2) • Full Senate/House (X2) • Conference Committee • President
Appropriations Process: Points of Influence • Budget Formulation • Agency, Department, OMB • Congressional Budget • House & Senate Committees • Legislative Appropriations • Full Committees • House & Senate Subcommittees
James Walsh, NY Ralph Regula, OH John Peterson, PA Dave Weldon, FL Michael Simpson, ID Dennis Rehberg, MT David Obey, WI Nita Lowey, NY Rosa DeLauro, CT Jesse Jackson, IL Patrick Kennedy, RI Lucille Roybal-Allard, CA Barbara Lee, CA Tom Udall, NM Michael Honda, CA Betty McCollum, MN Tim Ryan, OH House SubcommitteeLabor-HSS-Ed Appropriations
Tom Harkin, IA Daniel Inouye, HI Herb Kohl, WI Patty Murray, WA Mary Landrieu, LA Dick Durbin, IL Jack Reed, RI Frank Lautenberg, NJ Arlen Specter, PA Thad Cochran, MS Judd Gregg, NH Larry Craig, ID Kay B Hutchison, TX Ted Stevens, AK Richard Shelby, AL Senate SubcommitteeLabor-HHS-Ed Appropriations
What is Advocacy? • Advocacy = education + action. • An advocate is one who argues for a cause – a supporter or defender. • A lobbyist is a paid representative of a group, organization or industry.
Basic Rules for Advocacy • Advocates must have a clear agenda. • Advocacy must be based on science. • Advocates must have the discipline to be articulate. • Advocates must define their opportunities to reach key players and decision-makers.
Advocates have clear agenda • Specific focus not “single-issue” • Know what will sell • Know what the hierarchy wants • Written agenda: explicit • Consensus agenda: no fighting
Advocates use science • Know the science base • Know where can make a difference • Use and protect your credibility • Be honest, don’t oversell • Take the high ground
Advocates are articulate • No jargon • Make it fit one page • Know your audience • Know your opposition • Don’t criticize others • Washington Post rule
Advocates are opportunistic • Learn the process • Take advantage of opportunities – hearings, briefings, trips to DC, recess • Collaboration – bigger impact • Coordination – traffic control • Repetition
What can YOU do? • Learn your workplace rules • Act as an individual • Act as member of an organization • Act!
Workplace Rules • First Amendment rights • Personal views • Personal time • No use of state or federal funds • Agency policy
Action Items Seven easy pieces …
Get Informed • Who are your Members? • What are their interests? • What committees, subcommittees? • What coalitions, caucuses • Family health issues • Hometown connections
Write a letter • Keep it short, single issue • Identify yourself – constituent, public health professional • Be accurate • Tell why important, impact • State desired action • Thanks, praise
Make a personal visit • Identify yourself as constituent • Request an appointment • Bring colleagues with you • Deliver message in 3 minutes • Be prepared, be a resource • Follow up, thank you
Make a phone call • Call US Capitol Switchboard 202-224-3121 • Ask for Office of Senator or Rep. • Identify yourself as constituent • Leave message • Support/oppose bill • Urge vote for/against • One or two reasons • Thanks
Be a resource to staff • Establish relationship • State or local data • Rankings, comparisons, maps • Human interest stories • State, local publications • Research articles
Invite them to your place • Recess: February, April, May, July, August, October – December • Give a speech • Attend an event • Make a site visit • Receive an award/recognition
Join a coalition or voluntary health organization • Make your voice louder • Get updates • Get action alerts • Work together
Where to Get Help • American Heart Association www.americanheart.org • National Association of Chronic Disease Directors www.chronicdisease.org • Centers for Disease Control www.cdc.gov/nccdphp/dhdsp
Where to get help, cont. • Partnership to Fight Chronic Disease www.fightchronicdisease.org • Partnership for Prevention www.prevent.org • National Coalition for Women with Heart Disease www.womenheart.org • American Public Health Association www.apha.org
Summary • We can’t do it without each other • Education + Action = Advocacy • Peanut butter and jelly • Proof is in the pudding • Many roads, one goal • Public health is watching you • Friends, gotta have ‘em • Timing is everything
Do something! Democracy is not a spectator sport.