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FOXX WEB SITE WINS 2006 BRONZE MOUSE AWARD

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Todd Poole
336-778-0211

Only North Carolina Web Site Honored



Washington, D.C. – The Web site of Congresswoman Virginia Foxx was honored today by the Congressional Management Foundation, a non-profit, non-partisan management consulting and research organization in Washington, D.C., for being one of the best in Congress. The site, www.foxx.house.gov, was one of 615 evaluated in The 2006 Gold Mouse Report: Recognizing the Best Web Sites on Capitol Hill, which analyzed congressional Web sites including those of all Senate and House Members, committees (both majority and minority sites), and official leadership sites. Eighty-five Web sites were cited in 2006, with 18 winning Gold, 27 winning Silver, and 40 winning Bronze Mouse Awards. The Foxx web site was the only North Carolina delegation site honored with an award.

"The staff and I are very pleased to receive this recognition of our website. Erica Shrader and the entire staff deserve much of the credit and I commend them for their commitment to making our site user friendly and packed with information that will help constituents of the 5th district,” Foxx said. “We are all there to serve the people of the 5th district and are focused on that in all that we do. This recognition will spur us on to have an even better site in the future."

The Gold Mouse Report and Awards are part of the Congressional Management Foundation’s broader research project, “Connecting to Congress,” funded by a grant from the National Science Foundation. For this project CMF partnered with researchers from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, University of California-Riverside and Ohio State University to study how Members of Congress can use the Internet to improve communications with their constituents and to promote greater participation in the legislative process.

“One of the key purposes of the awards is to highlight best practices so offices can improve their sites by learning from those doing a good job,” said Beverly Bell, executive director of the Congressional Management Foundation. “Web sites that garnered an Award in 2006 illustrate the best practices that we hope can serve as examples for others to follow.”

“Congresswoman Foxx’s Web site shows that she has identified the needs of her various constituencies and has developed easily accessible content that meets their needs online,” said Bell. “Congresswoman Foxx is to be congratulated for being among the best of the best Web sites on Capitol Hill, and the Congressional Management Foundation is pleased to present her with the 2006 Bronze Mouse Award.”

“The 2006 report shows that Web sites are an increasingly critical channel through which Members communicate to, and hear from, constituents. In a time when people can do everything online from renewing their driver licenses to paying their taxes, they understandably expect to find information on the Web about legislation and congressional assistance with federal agencies, as well as the opportunity to communicate their own views,” Bell said.

Web sites were graded on how well they incorporate five basic building blocks that extensive research has identified as critical for effectiveness: audience, content, usability, interactivity, and innovation. Using these building blocks, an evaluation framework was developed by CMF and their research partners at Harvard, Ohio State, and the University of California-Riverside that would be fair and objective, while still taking into account important qualitative factors that affect a visitor's experience on a Web site.

CMF will be assessing congressional Web sites again in 2007. All House and Senate Member, committee and leadership Web sites will be evaluated during the summer of 2007 and another report is expected to be released by the end of the year.

A full copy of the report, the 2006 Gold Mouse Report: Recognizing the Best Web Sites on Capitol Hill, is available on the Congressional Management Foundation’s Web site at www.cmfweb.org

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