Thank you for writing to President Clinton
via electronic mail.
Since June
1993, the President has received over 2.8 million messages
from people
across the country and around the world.
Online
communication
has become a tool to bring government and the people
closer
together.
Because so many of you write, the
President cannot personally review
each message,
though he does receive samples of his incoming
correspondence.
The White House Correspondence staff helps him read and
respond to the
mail. All responses are mailed via the U.S. Postal
Service. This is the only electronic message you will
receive from
whitehouse.gov. No other message purporting to be from the
President or
his staff with
an address at whitehouse.gov is authentic. If you have
received such
a message, you have received a "spoof."
We appreciate your interest in the work
of the Administration.
Sincerely,
Stephen K. Horn
Director, Presidential E-mail
The Office of Correspondence
P.S. Please
read on - you may find the following information useful.
-- Regardless of the number of messages you
may send, you will receive
only one autoresponder
message per day.
-- The only personal addresses at
whitehouse.gov are the following:
President@whitehouse.gov
Vice.President@whitehouse.gov
First.Lady@whitehouse.gov
Mrs.Gore@whitehouse.gov
Please write
to White House staff by regular mail.
The address is:
The White House, Washington, D.C.,
Zip codes as follows:
20500 (mail to the President and
First Family)
20501 (mail to the Vice President,
his family, and OVP staff)
20502 (all White House Office Staff,
all CEA, OPD, OSTP, and
PFIAB staff)
20503 (all CEQ, OA, OMB, and ONDCP
staff)
20504 (all NSC staff)
20508 (all USTR staff)
-- On October 20, 1994, President Clinton and
Vice President Gore
opened a World
Wide Web home page called "Welcome to the White House:
An Interactive
Citizens' Handbook," and it remains one of the more
popular spots
on the Web.
The White House home page provides, among
other things, a single
point of
access to virtually all government information available on the
Internet.
Children especially enjoy the "White House for Kids" feature
-- look for your tour guides, Socks and Buddy,
the First Pets. "Welcome
to the White
House" can be accessed at:
http://www.whitehouse.gov
-- White House documents and publications are
available on the World
Wide Web (see
above) and by E-mail. To receive
instructions on
retrieving
documents by E-mail, please send a message to the following
address:
publications@pub.pub.whitehouse.gov
In the Subject
line, type "hello" (without quotes); you may leave the
body of the
message blank. The instructions will be
sent to you
automatically.
-- The White House Public Access E-mail FAQ
(Frequently Asked
Questions)
document is available at the following address. Send an
E-mail message
(no text necessary) to:
FAQ@whitehouse.gov
Among other
things, the FAQ lists alternate sources of government
information,
e.g., the Congressional E-mail projects.
(This FAQ address
is an
autoresponder only; any comment sent to this address will not be
acknowledged.)
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