WASHINGTON - While the job doesn't officially start for another month and a half, Congressman-elect Erik Paulsen has already been bombarded with advice on matters substantial and small.
"Stay away from the upper levels of the House office buildings and try to get [an office] near the entrances, so you don't have so far to walk," one congressional aide advised Paulsen ahead of Friday's House office lottery.
"To tell you the truth, I don't care if I was in a broom closet," said Paulsen, a Republican from Eden Prairie. "I'm just going to work hard while I'm here."
Since his arrival in Washington at the start of the week, Paulsen has been loaded up with massive amounts of information to digest as part of the new member orientation. It teaches newly elected members a host of things, including how-tos on the office lottery, ethics rules and the electronic roll call votes.
There's a lot of housekeeping and logistics to wade through, Paulsen said, but the orientation also presents him with a chance to get to know his colleagues.
"Coming from the state Legislature, I've found that a lot of the closest relationships you build end up being colleagues in your class or on the committees you serve on," he said.
Paulsen, a former Minnesota House majority leader, won election this month to succeed retiring Republican Rep. Jim Ramstad, his mentor and onetime boss.
As the only freshman Minnesotan in the U.S. House, Paulsen faces his share of challenges: looming economic woes, being a first-term Republican in a Democratic-dominated House and trying to replace a popular nine-term representative known for his moderate stances on issues.