1 / 27

Legislative Advocacy: Engaging with State Legislators

Legislative Advocacy: Engaging with State Legislators. Updated: February 28, 2015. Democracy is not a Spectator Sport It is a “Contact” Sport. Engaging with State Legislators. Effective Advocacy How to be Heard in Olympia Advocacy Tips & Tricks Resources. Effective Advocacy. Be informed:

fayre
Download Presentation

Legislative Advocacy: Engaging with State Legislators

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Legislative Advocacy:Engaging with State Legislators Updated: February 28, 2015

  2. Democracy is not a Spectator Sport It is a “Contact” Sport

  3. Engaging with State Legislators • Effective Advocacy • How to be Heard in Olympia • Advocacy Tips & Tricks • Resources

  4. Effective Advocacy • Be informed: • about the PROCESS • about the ISSUES • about the PLAYERS

  5. Be Informed about the Process How a Bill Becomes Law: aka “Structured Chaos”

  6. Be Informed about the Issues • WASA • Web site: www.wasa-oly.org • Newsletter: TWIO – This Week in Olympia • End of Session Report • WSSDA, AWSP, PTA, WEA, OSPI

  7. Be Informed about the Players • Legislators: • What District? • What Committee assignments? • Leadership position? • Issues of interest/expertise? • Personal information: occupation, social/civic memberships, schools attended, church affiliation, hobbies

  8. Be Informed about the Players Additional Players in the process: • Legislator’s personal staff • Committee staff • Caucus staff • Agency liaisons • Lobbyists

  9. How to be Heard in Olympia • Contacting your legislators • Personal letters • Phone calls • E-mail • Face-to-face meetings • Public testimony

  10. Writing to Your Legislator(s) • Tips: • Think about your timing • Stick to one subject • Be brief • Be positive; be polite • Ask for action – and a response • Think about letters from students • Avoid form letters • Say “thank you”

  11. Phoning Your Legislator(s) • Tips: • Ask for legislator or specific assistant (know the players) • Name, title, school district • Focus on one issue/bill • State your position—be prepared to provide rationale for position • Ask for your legislator’s position

  12. E-mailing Your Legislator(s) • Tips: • See tips for “writing to your legislator(s)” (slide 11) • AND - • Limit e-mail to very short messages or if timing is crucial • Provide your full postal address (address of voter registration)

  13. Meeting with Your Legislator(s) • Tips: • Schedule meeting well in advance • Note subject matter and attendees • Do your homework (know the process; issues; and players) • Prepare presentation; select spokesperson • Introduce yourself and/or team

  14. Meeting with Your Legislator(s) • Tips, cont’d: • Briefly present your case • “just the facts” – avoid emotion • note the impacts • use visuals • Leave one-page summary • Follow up with written “thank you” • re-state your position • provide answers to questions

  15. Public Testimony • Prior to testifying: • Prepare your remarks in writing if possible—provide to Committee staff • Be punctual to hearing • Locate sign-in sheet • Sign in with full name and address • Note support or opposition to bill • Be mindful of amendments or substitutes to your bill

  16. Public Testimony • Making your remarks: • Introduce yourself; clearly indicate who you’re representing, if anyone • Be brief and be clear about your position • Avoid technical jargon, acronyms • Be prepared for questions—but don’t answer if you don’t know (“I’ll get back to you”—AND then follow through)

  17. Advocacy “Tips and Tricks” • Establish an ongoing, personal relationship with your legislators • Know your legislator’s staff • Keep Association staff informed • Collaborate with community groups • Attempt to personalize issues with names of students, teachers, school buildings, etc.

  18. Resources

  19. Websites • WASA: www.wasa-oly.org • Education Associations: • WSSDA: www.wssda.org • AWSP: www.awsp.org • WEA: www.washingtonea.org • PTA: www.wastatepta.org • Education Agencies: • OSPI: www.k12.wa.us • SBE: www.sbe.wa.gov • PESB: www.pesb.wa.gov • Legislative-related: • Legislature Homepage: www.leg.wa.gov • Governor’s Homepage: www.governor.wa.gov • LEAP (Budget info): http://leap.leg.wa.gov/leap/default.asp

  20. If you don’t advocate for your students, your district and your staff, who will? You can be sure someone will speak up—and they may not have the same information, experience or position as you. Legislative Advocacy— Why be Involved?

  21. “The Only Thing Necessary for the Triumph of Evil is that Good Men Do Nothing” -Charles F. Aked (1864-1941)

  22. WASA’s Message • An educated citizenry is critical to the state’s democracy; a well-educated population is the foundation of our democracy, our economy, and the American dream • Public education plays a critical role in promoting equality, operating as the great equalizer; public education provides unprivileged citizens with the tools they need to compete on a level playing field with citizens born into wealth or privilege

  23. WASA’s Message • Education plays a critical role in building and maintaining a strong economy; public education builds the well-educated workforce necessary to attract more stable and higher wage jobs to the state’s economy • Washington’s duty to education is constitutionally declared to be its paramount duty • In summary: Public education is a wise “investment” in the future

  24. Daniel P. Steele Assistant Executive Director, Government Relations 825 Fifth Avenue SE Olympia, WA 98501 360.489.3642 dsteele@wasa-oly.org Engaging with Legislators Updated: February 28, 2015

More Related