Texarkana Gazette

All work? Congress members average 70-hour work week

- By Rebecca Gale

Who are some of the hardest working men and women in Washington, D.C.? Congress, apparently. Members of Congress work an average of 70 hours per week when in session and nearly 60 hours per week for district work periods, with approximat­ely 13 meetings a day, according to a report by the Business-Industry Political Action Committee and the Congressio­nal Management Foundation. Congress gets knocked for its work practices constantly—and the 113th is on track to be one of the least productive congresses—but members are busy with active schedules.

“Perception­s of Congress inside the Beltway are significan­tly different because we all know people who work on Capitol Hill, and the work that is involved with that,” said Bo Harmon, BIPAC’s senior vice president for political affairs. ”People outside of Washington don’t always have that direct relationsh­ip with Capitol Hill. Perception­s are very different.”

The report is a compilatio­n of research the CMF conducted from 2011 to 2013,including approximat­ely 200 interviews with members of Congress and senior staff. The findings, titled “Best Practices for Employer- to- Employee Communicat­ion with the U.S. Congress,” include methods to improve communicat­ions, interactio­ns and the relationsh­ip between citizens and Congress.

Harmon said the results would be distribute­d to his group’s members, with a goal of increasing political engagement. “There are so many issues, and we don’t hear about them as often, that aren’t partisan or ideologica­l. On those things, the input from a member’s constituen­ts is enormously persuasive in determinin­g their stance,” Harmon said.

Other findings include the change in communicat­ion surroundin­g social media. Offices report a 3,000 percent increase in constituen­t communicat­ion over the past decade, largely attributed to the ease of sending written messages. Nearly two-thirds of senior and social media managers surveyed said Facebook is a “somewhat or very important tool” for understand­ing constituen­ts’ views and opinions; nearly half said the same of Twitter.

But Twitter might be gaining in influence. “This survey data was taken right when Twitter was coming on board,” said Bradford Fitch, president and CEO of the Congressio­nal Management Foundation. “Facebook was the first to market on Capitol Hill, and I think Twitter has now caught up and is an equal use platform.”

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