How to Host Your Lawmaker

Do you wonder how you and your company can impact the public policy process?

While the NWRA Government Affairs team works daily to cultivate relationships with legislators and provide input on bills and regulations that have impacts on the waste and recycling industry, nothing is more important to the NWRA advocacy effort than constituent relationships with lawmakers. There are many things NWRA members can do to increase positive exposure of the industry and build or renew relationships with members of Congress back in their home districts. Foremost among these is hosting lawmakers at your facility.

Facility Tours

Facility tours of your operations are one of the most effective ways to initiate or build upon a relationship with your U.S. representative, U.S. senators or local lawmakers. These are excellent opportunities to increase lawmakers’ understanding of the waste and recycling industry and your company’s importance in the community. Lawmakers can see firsthand the operations of your facility and how legislative and regulatory issues affect your business. Visits to local operations also allow lawmakers to meet large numbers of their constituents, something they always welcome and that builds legislative goodwill.

Your guests will have the opportunity to view aspects of the operations that they have only read or heard about previously. They can begin to develop a deeper understanding of the employees, procedures and equipment that are integral parts of a waste and recycling operation. Use these demonstrations to discuss current issues with the lawmakers, such as the need to increase domestic demand for recyclable materials, improving America’s infrastructure or a workforce issue, and point out potential impacts on specific functions of the site, providing the lawmakers with “up-close-and-personal” perspectives on the issue.

When organizing a visit or tour, it is important to think through the logistics. For example, you may want to spend more time in one part of the facility to demonstrate how that operation would be affected by particular legislation. Every operation is different, but there are some guidelines to make the tour effective and successful.

Schedule a meeting by calling the state or district office and asking for the scheduler or appointment secretary. Explain your purpose and whom you represent.

Sample Legislator Meeting Request Letter

(To be put on your letterhead and sent as a .pdf or Word .doc via email attachment)

(Date)
The Honorable (Full Name)
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510
Attention Scheduler: Constituent Meeting Request

Dear Senator (Last Name):

I am writing to invite you on a tour of [name of your company]’s facilities in [operation location] during the [insert date range] recess.

Our company [insert brief description of your company] is a member of the National Waste & Recycling Association (NWRA). NWRA is the voice in the nation’s capital for the private sector waste and recycling industry that is essential to maintaining the quality of American life.

Waste and recycling impacts all residential, commercial and industrial properties on a daily basis. The waste and recycling industry directly employs about 420,000 men and women as of early 2018 with a total payroll of more than $21 billion. It is estimated overall that the private sector waste and recycling industry accounts for more than one million jobs and generates nearly a quarter of a trillion dollars in U.S. GDP.

I hope that your schedule will allow you to visit our company’s facilities and meet our employees. Please have your staff contact me at [your phone number] to arrange a tour.

I look forward to meeting with you.

Sincerely,
[Your signature]
Name
Title

Before the Tour
During the Tour
After the Tour
Writing to Legislators

The following are tips on writing to legislators:

When writing to members of the Senate:
The Honorable (name)
United States Senate
Washington, DC 20510

When writing to members of the House:
The Honorable (name)
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, DC 20515