[Congressional Bills 107th Congress]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
[H. Res. 125 Introduced in House (IH)]
107th CONGRESS
1st Session
H. RES. 125
Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the National
Capital Planning Commission should adopt a plan that permanently
returns Pennsylvania Avenue to the use of residents, commuters, and
visitors to the Nation's capital and that protects the security of the
people who live and work in the White House, and that the President
should adopt and implement such a plan.
_______________________________________________________________________
IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
April 26, 2001
Mrs. Morella (for herself, Mr. Tom Davis of Virginia, Ms. Norton, Mr.
Knollenberg, Mr. Petri, Mr. Moran of Virginia, Mr. Doolittle, Mr.
Frank, and Mr. Clay) submitted the following resolution; which was
referred to the Committee on Government Reform
_______________________________________________________________________
RESOLUTION
Expressing the sense of the House of Representatives that the National
Capital Planning Commission should adopt a plan that permanently
returns Pennsylvania Avenue to the use of residents, commuters, and
visitors to the Nation's capital and that protects the security of the
people who live and work in the White House, and that the President
should adopt and implement such a plan.
Whereas in 1791 President George Washington commissioned Pierre Charles L'Enfant
to draft a blueprint for American's new capital city, and they
envisioned Pennsylvania Avenue as a bold, ceremonial boulevard
physically linking the United States Capitol building and the White
House, and symbolically linking the legislative and executive branches
of government;
Whereas Pennsylvania Avenue stood for 195 years and served as a vital, unbroken
roadway, critical to the economic vitality and commerce of the District
of Columbia and the surrounding region;
Whereas on May 20, 1995, citing possible security risks from vehicles
transporting terrorist bombs, President Clinton ordered the Department
of the Treasury and the Secret Service to close temporarily the two
blocks of Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House to vehicular
traffic;
Whereas the temporary closing is almost in its sixth year and continues to
significantly impede and congest traffic, forcing costly and
inconvenient delays on residents, commuters, and tourists, adding to
already severe air pollution, placing additional financial burdens
through lost revenues on the District of Columbia Government, and
curtailing commerce;
Whereas while the security of the President and his family and visitors to the
White House is of obvious concern, the need to assure the President's
safety does not conflict with our principles of open and accessible
institutions;
Whereas locally elected leadership, including the Mayor of the District of
Columbia, the Council of the District of Columbia, and the Metropolitan
Washington Council of Governments, which consists of representatives of
local governments throughout the Washington metropolitan region, urges
the President to reopen Pennsylvania Avenue;
Whereas the National Capital Planning Commission, the Federal Government's
central planning authority in the Nation's Capital, established a task
force to evaluate the impact of security measures around the White House
and national memorials and Federal buildings in the city's monumental
core and to evaluate various proposals to reopen Pennsylvania Avenue;
Whereas the Federal City Council and others have put forward plans which would
reopen Pennsylvania Avenue while enhancing the security of the White
House; and
Whereas the National Capital Planning Commission will recommend by July of this
year a design to the President and the Congress that balances security
needs while ensuring that Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White
House is accessible and open: Now, therefore, be it;
Resolved, That it is the sense of the House of Representatives that
the National Capital Planning Commission should adopt a plan that
permanently returns Pennsylvania Avenue to the use of residents,
commuters, and visitors to the Nation's capital and that protects the
security of the people who live and work in the White House, and that
the President should adopt and implement such a plan.
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