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Senator Joe Lieberman
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Flag Requests

I am pleased to be able to offer Connecticut State residents the service of having a United States flag flown over the United States Capitol Building. Flags can be flown any day of the year for special occasions - such as birthdays or anniversaries.

To place your order for a flag flown over the U.S. Capitol, please print and fill out the ORDER FORM on this page and mail it to my office, along with a check or money order, payable to Keeper of the Stationery.

Senator Joseph I. Lieberman
United States Senate
Attn: Flag Orders
706 Hart Senate Office Building
Washington, DC 20510

Pricing: All flags are provided at a cost to you, the requester (see pricing chart below). Additionally, second and third-party billing is not allowed, and credit cards are not accepted.

Size Fabric Price Flying & Shipping Total Cost
3x5 Nylon $9.00 $4.05 and $4.00 $17.05
3x5 Cotton $9.25 $4.05 and $4.00 $17.30
4x6 Nylon $13.50 $4.05 and $4.00 $21.55
5x8 Nylon $18.00 $4.05 and $4.00 $26.05
5x8 Cotton $20.00 $4.05 and $4.00 $28.05

Time Considerations: Please be advised that due to increased security procedures for mail coming into the United States Senate, there is a delay of several weeks for all mail arriving at my Washington, DC office. Therefore, we advise you to send your flag request at least six weeks in advance of your requested flying date. If you cannot meet this timeline, we ask that you supply us with a secondary flag flying date so we can best accommodate your request.

Due to the volume of requests the Flag Office recieves, flags will not be received until 6 to 8 weeks after the date they are flown. This process cannot be altered of expedited by our office.

To learn about laws and customs that affect the American Flag, click here.

Again, I thank you for your continued patience and understanding, and hope you enjoy your new flag.

If you have any questions or concerns regarding the flag ordering process, please e-mail my staff through my online web form by clicking here.

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Issue Spotlight

 

Senators Introduce Revised Cybersecurity Legislation, S.3414

The five co-sponsors of bipartisan cybersecurity legislation introduced new, revised legislation July 19, 2012; to protect our national security, economic security, and life-sustaining services from increasingly commonplace cyber-attacks.

The co-sponsors - Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee Chairman Joe Lieberman, ID-Conn., Ranking Member Susan Collins, R-Maine, Commerce Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller, D-W.Va., Select Intelligence Committee Chairman Dianne Feinstein, D-Ca., and Federal Financial Management Subcommittee Chairman Tom Carper, D-Del. – offered the revised Cybersecurity Act of 2012 in a good faith effort to secure enough votes to address the immediate threat of attack from foreign nations, hacktivists, criminals, and terrorists against the nation’s most critical cyber systems. More information: here.

Watch Senator Lieberman's Recent Floor Speech About Cybersecurity

 

The "Fiscal Cliff"

There are several major tax and spending policy changes set take effect under current law at end of 2012 or early in 2013, collectively referred to by some as the "fiscal cliff." These tax provisions include the expiration of the "Bush tax cuts" and the Social Security payroll tax rate reduction. Major spending changes include the expiration of certain extended unemployment benefits, reductions to Medicare payments to physicians, and the automatic spending cuts enacted as part of the Budget Control Act of 2011. Congress likely will consider the benefits of deficit reduction against the potential implications of fiscal policy choices for the ongoing economic recovery. In addition, Congress likely will debate other policies not directly related to the fiscal cliff, including another debt limit increase and FY2013 appropriations bills.

 

Read Senator Lieberman's Recent WSJ Op-Ed About the Fiscal Cliff