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For Public Employees: Being An Advocate From the Inside

Here are five things to think about with respect to your role as advocates.

(1)Advocacy and Lobbying are not the same:


Much of what you are likely to do is advocacy, not lobbying, and you can advocate for people, programs, and issues you care about.

(2)The Legislative Process is set up to answer 3 questions:


You can help provide information to determine the answers to all three. It's part of the job.

(3) Along the way, there is much you can help with:

(4) Some Possibilities:


PLUS:
Can do a lot on your own time: can lobby, be part of telephone and/or letter trees.

(5)Plus, you can help advocates in still more ways:

Bottom Line: think of your job as including --

Use Careful Communication:
You can NOT abuse your role; can NOT speak for your agency unless that is your assigned job; you must NOT trade on your position as an agency employee when lobbying as a private citizen. You can NOT use public resources (e.g., computer, salaried time, copy machine) to lobby.

But you do not lose your rights as a citizen: you can speak up on your own time, using your own resources, in your own personal style. And you DO have the right to help others be effective advocates for themselves, their families, their communities, and programs that help them.

Prepared by Nancy Amidei (amidei@u.washington.edu), for the Civic Engagement Project - A joint project of the University of Washington School of Social Work and OMB Watch