Members continued to be inundated with phone calls from constituents and interest groups Friday thanks to an impending vote on health care reform this weekend.
Calls to the House numbered close to 100,000 an hour, creating a bottleneck in a phone system only meant to handle 50,000 calls an hour. The chamber has been similarly overloaded for four consecutive days, beginning on Tuesday when radio host Rush Limbaugh told viewers to call the Capitol switchboard phone number.
Jeff Ventura, spokesman for Chief Administrative Officer Dan Beard, said the problem was essentially unsolvable. The issue lies with the capacity of the cables buried underneath the Capitol complex and even if those could be dug up and replaced, Members simply dont have enough staff to answer so many calls, he said.
Our capacity rate is about 50,000 calls an hour, and once we hit the 40,000 mark, we start to get these signals, he said. Were beyond that. Theres no other way to say it other than the system is at capacity.
Officials expect calls to taper off after the Houses scheduled Sunday vote on the health care reform package. But Ventura emphasized that the system for staffers BlackBerrys and smartphones was running smoothly.
Its not like Congress has come to a communication standstill, he said.
This isnt the first time Congress has been overcome with phone calls and e-mails in the runup to an important vote. Interest in the 2008 stimulus bill crashed House.gov and some Member Web sites, and in November, the Senates voice mail system was overloaded before the chambers cloture vote on health care reform legislation.
Its hard to predict the interest in this kind of legislation, Ventura said. I mean its historic. Here you have piece of legislation that is so defining, its just causing massive interest.
Rep. Bill Cassidy has his blood drawn by Alesha Barbour during a free hepatitis screening in the Rayburn House Office Building hosted by the Congressional Viral Hepatitis Caucus to recognize "National Viral Hepatitis Testing Day."
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