House Lyme Caucus: Is Your Rep Signed on? Why Not?

May is Lyme Disease Awareness Month. The Lyme Disease Association says Let’s get our Representatives in the US House of Representatives to sign up for the House Lyme Caucus. It is a bi-partisan group working together in Congress to take action on Lyme & tick-borne diseases. Under the leadership of Congressmen Chris Smith (NJ) and co-chair Colin Peterson (MN), it has initiated letters and actions to benefit Lyme patients, such as the inclusion of the monies for Lyme & tick-borne diseases into the Congressionally Directed Medical Research Program (CDMRP) and language and Lyme monies into Appropriations over the years and initiated favorable legislation. Additionally, it has queried government agencies over policies not favorable to patients. This has reminded the agencies that someone is looking over their shoulder. Many meetings have been held and educational sessions in DC for Congress.Rep. Chris Smith, Pat Smith, Rich Smith discussing actions to take for House Lyme CaucusPat Smith, President & Rich Smith, Vice President of the LDA met in Wall, NJ, with Congressman Chris Smith, Co-Chair of the House Lyme Caucus, to discuss what actions can be taken in DC to help those with Lyme and to stop the spread of Lyme & other tick-borne diseases, 4/19/2017

If your US Representative or any US Representative who serves the state your group serves is not on the list below, contact him/her immediately and ask why not. Remind them the Lyme disease tick is now found in 50% of US counties and there were almost 400,000 cases in 2015. There are about 20 tick-borne diseases now in the U.S. being spread by at least 8 different ticks, not just the blacklegged/deer tick. Send them to the newly revised Lyme Disease Association LymeR Primer information brochure  where they can read about them. Ask them what they have done about this emerging epidemic of tick-borne diseases where 30% of reported cases of Lyme are children ages 0-19.

Give them a simple task: Sign-on today to the House Lyme caucus! To sign on they can write:
[email protected], Rep. C.Smith office OR
[email protected], Rep. Peterson office

Tell your Representative you will be calling back in a week to see if he/she signed up. Then do so! We will add new names as we receive them from the Caucus.

Click here to find your Representative

List of Current House Lyme Disease Caucus
Signons in green are based on our efforts to get new signons. Thanks Lyme community, keep calling other congressmen to get them on board.

Christopher H. Smith (NJ-4) Co-Chair
Collin C. Peterson (MN-7) Co-Chair
Lou Barletta (PA-11)
Michael E. Capuano (MA-7)
Steve Cohen (TN-9)
Gerald E. Connolly (VA-11)
Barbara Comstock (VA-10)
Ryan Costello (PA-6)
Joe Courtney (CT-2)
Diana DeGette (CO-1)
Dan Donovan (NY-11)
John Faso (NY-19)

Vicky Hartzler (DC)
Eleanor Holmes Norton (DC)
William R. Keating (MA-9)
Joseph P. Kennedy III (MA-4)
Raja Krishnamoorthi (IL-8)
Zoe Lofgren (CA-19)
Sean Patrick Maloney (NY-18)
Congressman Tom Marino (PA-10)
James P. Mc Govern (MA-2)
Congressman Seth Moulton (MA-6)
Scott Peters (CA-52)
Chellie Pingree (ME-1)
Mark Pocan (WI-2)
Bill Posey (FL-8)
Tom Reed (NY-23)
Carol Shea-Porter (NH-1)
Glenn Thompson (PA-5)
Paul Tonko (NY-20)
Robert J. Wittman (VA-1)

More about the Caucus

The bipartisan Congressional Lyme Disease Task Force, co-chaired by Rep. Chris Smith (R-NJ) and Rep. Collin Peterson (D-MN), is dedicated to educating Members of Congress and staff about Lyme and other tick-borne diseases, as well as advancing initiatives that are designed to help the estimated 400,000 Americans who develop Lyme disease each year and all of those living with the disease.

As co-chairs of the bipartisan Task Force, Rep. Smith and Rep. Peterson lead annual appropriations requests in support of Lyme disease research through the Department of Health and Human Services and for research funding at the Department of Defense. In 2015, the caucus secured for the first time ever, $5 million in funding in the House Appropriations Committee annual military spending legislation, which was adopted in the Fiscal Year 2016 funding bill which was signed into law, and will provide resources for Lyme disease research through DOD’s innovative, high-risk, high-reward program.

Recently, the caucus secured another major win for Lyme disease. In December of 2016, the United States House of Representatives passed, and former-President Obama signed, the 21st Century Cures Act. The Cures Act included language – similar to a bill that Rep. Smith introduced previously – which created the Interagency Lyme and Tick-Borne Disease Working Group. Specifically, Working Group comprised of federal and non-federal members tasked with reporting to Congress on scientific advances, research questions, surveillance activities and emerging strains in species of pathogenic organisms.