Tell your Senators - We Need Fair & Effective Emergency Legislation

 

Senator Dianne Feinstein

SF Office: (415) 393-0707
DC Office: (202) 224-3841
LA Office: (310) 914-7300
Fresno Office: (559) 485-7430
San Diego Office: (619) 231-9712

If you can't get through to one office, try another.  There is no benefit to calling one office over another. Leaving a voicemail is as good as reaching a live person. Hate the phone? Resistbot is your friend.

Senator Kamala Harris

SF Office: (415) 981-9369
DC Office: (202) 224-3553
Sacramento Office: (916) 448-2787
LA Office: (213) 894-5000
San Diego Office: (619) 239-3884

Call the SF office first, but try the other offices if you can’t get through. If you can’t get a live person, leave a voicemail and also send a follow-up email written in your own words. Hate the phone? Resistbot is your friend.

Note: Due to shelter-in-place orders during the Covid-19 emergency, it may be more effective to use email or Resistbot to contact the MoC’s office. It is important to use your own words in emails to elected officials, but feel free to use our sample script below as a guide.

 

Call Script

My name is __________. I am a constituent, and my zip code is _______. I am a member of Indivisible SF.

I am disappointed that the deal on the Interim relief bill passed by the Senate on Tuesday failed to include such minimum essentials as:

  • A public commitment from McConnell that follow-on legislation will be voted on by the Senate

  • Funds and policies to protect and secure the November election

  • Emergency funds to sustain state and local governments.

We know that Republicans only care about corporations, once they get money for business they will stonewall all other needs. So we need [the Senator] to fight fiercely for legislation that includes the above minimum provisions.


Background

While the "Interim" small business relief bill ("phase 3.5") passed by the Senate on Tuesday contains greatly-needed funds for struggling businesses (including minority and women-owned) and also additional money for hospitals and COVID-19 testing, it completely ignores many issues crucial to fighting the pandemic and addressing mass economic misery. Therefore, we need the House to demand improvements on it before they pass it, and we want the Senate to begin drafting a follow-on legislative package (CARES-2) that covers the necessities omitted from the "Interim" bill.

Pelosi & Schumer have made a deal with Republicans for an "Interim" small business relief bill (AKA "phase 3.5" or "Stimulus 3.5") that includes:

  • $310 billion for the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) including $60 billion specifically for community banks and smaller lenders

  • $75 billion for hospitals

  • $25 billion for testing (and some vague language on testing plans & strategy)

  • $60 billion for emergency disaster loans and grants

But the deal fails to cover many issues crucial to fighting the pandemic and addressing mass economic misery. As the pandemic spreads and the economic crisis deepens, the list of legislation that We the People need (and demand) grows longer and ever more urgent. 

ISF believes that the Interim bill and follow-on emergency legislation and policy must adhere to two basic principles: 

  • Well-Up not Trickle-Down benefits. Financial aid must flow to people who have lost their jobs, are homeless, or who are following public-health guidelines to stay at home rather than continuing to work at a nonessential job.

  • Equal Treatment. All emergency-related provisions and benefits must be made equally  available to all people residing in the U.S. and its territories regardless of race, gender, immigration status, lifestyle, or their residence in territories rather than states. 

Emergency legislation and policies that need to be enacted now include:

  • Funds and policies to protect and secure the November election

  • Financial assistance to ensure survival of the Post Office (USPS)

  • Emergency financial aid for states and local governments

  • Financial aid not be conditional on acceptance White House mandated "reopen" demands

  • Financial aid to sustain non-governmental social-services (food banks, homeless shelters, senior centers etc)

  • Expanded funding for FEMA and the EPA to ensure access to emergency care and clean air and water.

  • Emergency economic aid coupled with increased health/safety oversight for nursing homes

  • On-going income rather than one-time checks for those unemployed because of pandemic

  • Emergency income for the long-term unemployed and those not covered by PPP

  • Free emergency healthcare coverage for those who don’t have insurance

  • Paid illness and family-leave coverage for all employees

  • Prohibiting financial institutions and debt collectors from seizing peoples' emergency financial aid

  • Foreclosure, eviction, and utility shutoff freezes for the duration of the emergency

  • Essential-worker hazard-pay and Bill of Rights covering health and safety

  • National OSHA standards on social distancing and PPE in the workplace

  • Large companies receiving bailout funds must maintain employees on payroll

  • Transparency on political spending, caps on executive pay, and no stock-buybacks by corporations receiving bailouts

  • Fair, transparent, non-partisan distribution of aid, supplies, and equipment

  • Acceptance by White House of congressional oversight of fund expenditures

  • Non-exclusive patents & licenses and fair-pricing for all COVID-19 tests, vaccines, and treatments developed with the aid of government funding.

While the above list is far too long for a constituent phone-call or email message to a Member of Congress, we plan to develop it further into a legislative letter that we will send in ISF's name to our Members of Congress. Would you be willing to also personally add your name to such a letter as we've done with some of our previous letters? 


 

This Week's US Congressional Call Scripts: