September 30, 2008

DC- PEOPLE CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE -- House of Representatives' Web site overwhelmed

Hummm, the US House was overwhelmed on the Financial Bailout bill! Lets see, there supposedly are OVER 600,000 RSOs, and their family members, well thats over a million. RSOs and advocates of those issues, just give that a thought and pass on to your family members and other advocates... Hint..Hint.. Faxes and telephones even to local offices of the Congessmen and Congresswomen.

9-30-2008 Washington D.C.:

WASHINGTON (CNN) -- The servers hosting the Web sites of the House of Representatives and its members have been overwhelmed with millions of e-mails in the past few days, forcing administrators to implement the "digital version of a traffic cop" to handle the overload -- for the first time ever.

"This is unprecedented," said Jeff Ventura, communications director for the House's chief administrator.

The tidal waves of e-mails and page views began over the weekend after negotiators announced Sunday that a deal had been reached on legislation to enact a $700 billion bailout of the country's financial system.

In making the announcement, legislators said the public could view the agreement at financialservices.house.gov.

"In a short period of time, lots of Web users were rushing to the digital doorway to get a copy of this thing," Ventura told CNN in a phone interview.

As millions of people tried to look at the details of the bailout plan, the House.gov system became overwhelmed and many people saw notices on their computer screens saying "this page does not appear." iReport.com: Do you support a bailout?

Ventura compared the situation to the "old days, when you listened to a radio show and the 10th caller got a toaster. Then everyone calls the same 1-800 number at the same time and all you got was a busy signal."

"This was a massive digital busy signal," he said.

As more people gained access to the page and details of the bailout proposal were published in the news media, constituents then started to e-mail their representatives, Ventura explained.

"We know it's in the millions," he said of the number of e-mails that lawmakers in the House have been receiving. "But we haven't counted yet, because when you're about to get hit by a tidal wave, you don't count the drops of water in the wave."

After the House failed to pass the proposed deal Monday by a vote of 228-205, the e-mail volume surged again, Ventura said.

"Because there were so many e-mails, it was impacting even the presentation of House.gov," he explained.

"This morning, our engineers sounded the alarms ... and we have installed a digital version of a traffic cop. We enacted stopgaps that we planned for last night. We had hoped we didn't have to."

The office of the chief administrative officer of the House of Representatives issued a statement Tuesday saying: "This measure has become temporarily necessary to ensure that congressional Web sites are not completely disabled by the millions of e-mails flowing into the system.
Engineers are working diligently to accommodate this enormous traffic flow and we appreciate your patience in this matter."

Now, when House.gov or individual members' sites begin to get overloaded, a message will come up on the computer screen saying, in effect, "try back later," Ventura said.

"This really tells us that the level of constituent engagement on this issue is extremely high," he added.

He said after the failed vote Monday and the initial backlash, the House's Web site administrators thought there would be a drop in Web traffic -- especially with the Rosh Hashanah holiday.

"We monitored the situation all night long, and technicians and engineers saw that we were facing the same demand as yesterday," Ventura said.

He predicted that traffic on those Web sites "would start to subside once there's some guidance on the marketplace and political landscape about what comes next."

Ventura said the House.gov Web site experienced a very high number of hits when the 9/11 commission released its final report on the September 11, 2001, terror attacks against the United States, but nothing like what the site has seen in the past few days. ..News Source.. by CNN News

1 comment:

Book38 said...

The only problem is that we cannot get the RSO community to help themselves and their family members don't seem to be interested either.

I have always thought that if the six hundred thousand RSO along with their family members wrote to both the state and federal legislators, WE WOULD PUT AN END TO OUR OPRESSION.

But...YOU have to "do something" in order to get a result. I will not harp on this as many of you have read my past posts. There is a way to gain back what has been stole from us, but it begins with RSO's and their families taking an active part in contacting their state and federal representatives.

YOU HAVE TO 'PREFORM AN ACTION' IN ORDER TO 'GET A RESULT'.