Notsure of your congressional district or who your member is? This service will assist you by matching your ZIP code to your congressional district, with links to your member's website and contact page.
There is no central listing of member office public e-mail addresses. Each member of Congress establishes their office's policy related to the processing and management of e-mail. Generally, if a member has a public e-mail address, it can be found on the member's website. The office may list a public e-mail address or provide a form directly on the member's website. The U.S. House of Representatives does not provide a listing of public e-mail addresses for the elected Representatives.
The Find Your Representative service matches the ZIP code information you provide with a list of congressional districts. If you receive an error due to a missing ZIP code or incorrect member information, please use the Contact Webmaster form to report the problem. Select the appropriate error category (Report an error in the Find Your Representative service.) and provide as much information as possible to assist us in researching the problem. Please be sure to include: Your Street Address, City, State and ZIP code, the member or congressional district information you are trying to reach and the member or congressional district the service is reporting that you feel is in error.
No. The webmaster will not forward messages to congressional offices. If you are having problems contacting your representative, you can report the problem using the Contact Webmaster form, write or call your elected representative, or visit the member's website for alternate contact information.
If you know who your representative is but you are unable to contact them using their contact form, the Clerk of the House maintains addresses and phone numbers of all House members and Committees, or you may call
(202) 224-3121 for the U.S. House switchboard operator. In addition, you may choose to visit your member's website directly for further information.
The Find Your Representative service is provided as a public resource for identifying and contacting a constituent's elected representative. There is currently no restriction on a link being posted to the Find Your Representative page at -your-representative to facilitate constituents in expressing their concerns and issues to their representative in Congress.
Send comments about the Find Your Representative service to the webmaster. Please note that messages for a specific representative sent to the webmaster will not be forwarded to the representative.
Whether other records survive or ever existed for a soldier depend upon a number of variable factors. If, for example, a soldier was wounded, or imprisoned as a POW or received an army pension, there may be records for these.
Many of the records covered in this guide contain a lot of obscure military abbreviations and acronyms and can be hard to decipher as a result. There are, however, some resources available online and at our library in Kew that can help you to interpret them.
This official list of MOD Acronyms and Abbreviations published on the
GOV.UK site contains thousands of terms in current use but many were in use during the Second World War. The Government of Canada also publishes a list of military abbreviations used in service files, many of which are applicable to British records.
Though not affiliated with The National Archives, the independent Researching the Lives and Records of WW2 Soldiers website also contains a very useful list of Second World War abbreviations and acronyms.
The vast scale of the recent transfer of British Army Second World War service records from the MOD to The National Archives means that only a small proportion are searchable in our catalogue or viewable in our reading rooms. You should try to locate a document reference for a service record yourself first and if you are unable to we will try to locate it for you. Once you have a document reference you can order a copy of the record.
Step 2: If you are unable to find a record at Step 1, submit a a Freedom of Information (FOI) application to request a search for and access to the record using one of the following three forms (charges may apply):
A recommendation is a full statement, usually supplied by a commanding officer, of why a medal or any other honour should be awarded to an individual. Each recommendation provides a detailed summary of the action or deed carried out by the person who earned the award. Search for online images of recommendations for military honours and awards () (WO 373) on our website.
To search for diaries, read the advice in our guide to records of British Army operations in the Second World War on unit war diaries. You will need to know which unit, often a battalion, a soldier served with to effectively search these records.
This collection consists of the service records of individuals of Chadian origin who had originally served as part of the Third Fighting French battalion of de Marche, part of Free French forces in Africa during the Second World War. The individuals included in this collection had deserted the Free French and were eventually integrated as a Pioneer Company in the British Army.
This tool allows users to search commitments data from FCC Form 471 applications starting in Funding Year 2016 (FY2016). Users can filter and export a detailed funding report to different formats (e.g., CSV for Excel) as well as explore the data through various summary charts.
This tool provides the latest data from the E-Rate FCC Form 471 applications filed in the most recent application filing window. Users can filter and export a detailed window data report to different formats (e.g., CSV for Excel) as well as explore the data through various summary charts.
This tool is no longer available. Applicants must log in to the EPC portal and navigate to their FCC Form 498 to check their form status. Service Providers should continue to check their FCC Form 498 status in the E-File system.
This tool enables users to search, view, and download FCC Form 471 data from FY2016 to present. It includes filtering capability across the seven FCC Form 471 datasets and includes original (certified) and current (committed) versions of each application.
For service delivery and invoicing deadline data for FY2016 and forward, please use the E-Rate FRN Invoicing Deadline Tool located in the open data platform. To access deadlines for FY2015 and prior, please use the Data Retrieval Tool (DRT).
The E-Rate FRN Invoice Deadline Tool provides users with the ability to search, view, and download funding request number (FRN) data related to invoicing including the invoice deadline date, funds remaining for invoicing, and the invoicing mode (BEAR vs SPI). The underlying data set has FRNs for FY2016+ and is sunset off the FCC Form 471 FRN Status data set.
This tool provides information on FCC Form 472 (BEAR Form) and FCC Form 474 (SPI Form) invoice line items for all funding years that USAC has reviewed and issued a payment decision on or after July 1, 2016.
Most of the Department's direct services to customers are provided through the Internet or by staff in our statewide network of local Career Centers. Find a Career Center to view information on local office locations and phone numbers. Use the contact information below for assistance with questions and issues that cannot be addressed at the local level OR if your contact with the GDOL involves programs operated at the state level.
Contact the GDOL by chatting with George A.I., our virtual agent located on the GDOL homepage in a chat box at the bottom of the page, or by calling the GDOL Virtual Agent by phone at
1-877-709-8185 unless otherwise specified.
To submit a tip on your phone, download the USMS Tips app from your mobile provider's marketplace. When you submit a tip using the USMS Tips mobile app, you can choose to receive push notifications to stay connected with us.
If you believe a prisoner in the custody of the United States Marshals Service (USMS) has a life-threatening medical or mental health condition requiring IMMEDIATE attention, please dial 911 if you are calling from the same county or city where the prisoner is located; otherwise, call the local emergency telephone number for emergency services for the area where the prisoner is located. You can also directly contact the detention facility where the prisoner is being housed. You may also call the National Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988 if the prisoner is in suicidal crisis or emotional distress.
If you wish to communicate non-emergency prisoner medical and mental health matters, please contact the detention facility where the prisoner is being housed directly or the local USMS Federal District office. A list of the Federal District USMS offices can be found at: -districts.
New Orleans, LA - United States Marshals will escort the casket of the late Tessie Prevost-Williams on July 26, 2024, when it lies in state at Gallier Hall and leaves for its final resting place on July 27, 2024, from the Branch Bell Baptist Church.
The U.S. Marshals Service manages a wide array of assets, including real estate, commercial businesses, cash, financial instruments, vehicles, jewelry, art, antiques, collectibles, vessels and aircraft through dismantling illegal enterprises and depriving criminals of their ill-gotten gains.
The U.S. Marshals Service plays a critical role in identifying and evaluating assets that represent the proceeds of crime as well as efficiently managing and selling assets seized and forfeited by the Department of Justice.
The Marshals manage the distribution of proceeds and payments to victims of crime and other innocent third parties, all of which helps to mitigate the financial damage inflicted by criminal activity.
The U.S. Marshals Service's judicial security personnel are responsible for providing a safe and secure business environment in support of the rule of law. To accomplish this, the agency must be continuously engaged in risk, threat, and vulnerability assessments.
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