[Congressional Record Volume 146, Number 155 (Friday, December 15, 2000)]
[Senate]
[Pages S11834-S11837]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
LEGISLATIVE SESSION
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will now
resume legislative session.
The Senator from New Jersey.
Mr. LAUTENBERG. Mr. President, I suspect you are getting weary of
issuing that statement.
Mr. President, just because I want to talk about 18 years of service
doesn't mean I have to take 18 hours to do it. I will try to
consolidate it.
I have been talking about things that meant so much to me in the
Senate and about the honor given when one is elected to this office.
Too often it is denigrated in the heat of battle for victory in
elections and again criticism of government and the bureaucrats, and so
forth. It gets to a point where I must say I am very defensive,
particularly for the staff who give so much of themselves to make
things happen.
[[Page S11835]]
Part of the work we have done over these years has proven to be of
benefit. I hope I will be forgiven for taking some minutes to talk
about things that can happen. I am proud of the work I did on gun
safety, especially the law which takes guns away from domestic violence
offenders who abuse their wives and their children. I am disappointed
that more wasn't done to close the gun show loophole which permits
people to buy weapons without any identification. I hope in the 107th
Congress, with the new Members on both sides of the aisle, people who
come here with good credentials, with those who have been here in the
past from the 106th Congress, we will pass that law.
Tobacco. Often when I am on an airplane, I am thanked by flight
attendants and passengers for writing the ban on smoking in airplanes.
It was a move that changed our country's cultural attitude on smoking.
The tobacco industry has to understand that. I hope scientists have
seen signs of understanding and cooperation that will lead them to work
with us, through the FAA, to try to come to some kind of reconciliation
of the position they are in where smoking brings so much damage and
costs to our society. They are beginning to know that, and I hope they
come up with something to permit citizens to avoid the poisons, the
addiction that results from cigarette smoking.
The Superfund is another program on which I worked fairly diligently
for a long time without success, so far, in terms of getting it
reauthorized, as it should be with a tax income that has those
responsible, who could be responsible for that pollution, pay for the
cleanups. We missed passing a bipartisan brownfields bill this year and
hope that will take place next year.
As we have reviewed tonight, transportation is one of my deepest
interests. In working the bill to maintain our mass transit system,
highways, airports, and ports have been a top priority for me as
chairman and ranking member of the Appropriations Transportation
Subcommittee. I believe we will face a serious transportation crunch in
the future, as discussed, unless we develop high-speed rail wherever we
can throughout this country. That is why this passage of the High Speed
Rail Investment Act is so critical. And, once again, I thank the
leaders for agreeing. I include the chairman of the Appropriations
Committee, Senator Stevens, and the ranking member, Senator Byrd, for
their willingness to cooperate getting that Amtrak bill in place next
year.
Also, I am delighted to have served with our friend, Senator Connie
Mack from Florida, who is also in the process of retiring from the
Senate. He and I worked very hard to get passage of a bill that
punishes those who would commit terrorist acts and to help the victims
of terrorism. We came to a conclusion, before we left on our last
break, that we will have these people receive compensation directed at
having those nations that support terrorism pay for it. We are trying
to get an understanding that, no matter what you do, if you support
terrorism or you commit an act of terrorism, you are going to have to
pay for it, and pay severely.
I am proud of the work, also, I was able to do on the Budget
Committee, especially the 1997 balanced budget agreement that laid the
foundation for some of the surpluses we are now enjoying. I must say,
when I walked across the lawn with the President of the United States
and watched him sign that bill, I thought it was a moment I only wished
my parents could have seen.
I have served with many great men and women in the Senate. I have
respect for all of them. I cannot name them all at this time, but I do
want to mention some of the special ones. I worked with great majority
and minority leaders. When I came here in 1983, Senator Howard Baker
was the majority leader. I found him to be one of the most honorable
people I have met. His word was his bond, and he taught me some early
lessons when I asked him for a letter confirming a statement he had
made to me, a promise he had made to me about a piece of legislation.
So I said: May I have a letter to that effect? He said: If you need a
letter from me, we are all in trouble.
I was startled for a moment. But I could see then that Senator Howard
Baker was a man of his word, as I have seen with other leaders on both
sides.
Senator Robert Byrd was minority leader when I came; later in the
1980s, Senator George Mitchell, Senator Bob Dole, distinguished leaders
of our two parties. In the 1990s, I had the privilege to work under the
stewardship of Senator Trent Lott and my good friend Senator Tom
Daschle, among the very good people who served in leadership roles. It
is not an easy place to manage. I don't know whether there is ever
going to be a school of hard knocks that is going to teach people how
to run the Senate. But I think it has to be learning under fire with an
occasional singeing here and there.
As a long-time member of the Appropriations Committee, I served under
terrific leadership: Senator Hatfield, Senator Stennis, Senator
Stevens, and Senator Byrd. I don't think anyone of either party would
quibble with my opinion that our friend Senator Byrd has been one of
the great Senators in the history of this Republic.
I have served for almost 16 years on the Senate Environment and
Public Works Committee. That committee was led by extraordinary
leadership, Senators such as Bob Stafford, Lloyd Bentsen, Quentin
Burdick, John Chafee, Pat Moynihan; and Bob Smith has taken over the
reins there. Max Baucus is the ranking member, and their leadership has
been excellent. We worked hard to get things done. The funny thing is,
it seemed that a spirit of bipartisanship just emerged without it being
put into a record book or a program design. It just worked that way.
I served on the Budget Committee. I did see Senator Pete Domenici
here. I did that for 16 years. I worked with the best. Pete Domenici is
an outstanding chairman. We disagree on some of the policy things, but
I wanted Senator Domenici to know how much I respected his work as
chairman of the Budget Committee. I finally got his attention.
Senator Domenici and I had some disagreements--we had many
agreements. But above all, we maintained respect for one another. That
even developed, if I might describe it, as affection for one another, a
respect for the turn our lives have taken and the problems we both
would like to solve in our society.
We had Jim Exon, Jim Sasser, Senator Stevens, we had some really good
people--Lawton Chiles--who worked to chair these committees. There are
others who left us with a memory of some greatness: People such as Ted
Kennedy, Pat Moynihan, fighters such as Howard Metzenbaum, Dale
Bumpers, statesmen such as Joe Biden, Lloyd Bentsen, and my colleague
Bill Bradley; and American heroes such as Danny Inouye, Bob Dole, Bob
Kerrey, and John Glenn--people who paid, in many cases, steep prices
for their service to country.
We worked with Presidents from both parties. Despite our differences,
I was able to get things done with Presidents Reagan and Bush.
Particularly with President Reagan, as I noted, I was able to get the
legislation in place that raised the legal drinking age to 21.
President Bush signed my legislation to ban smoking on all domestic
airlines. I don't know whether that says something about the old saw
that divided leadership in the various parts of government maybe
produces good results. I wish I could have tried it all my way, but it
did not get to work. But the system does work.
I cannot leave this place with any criticism of the place not working
or so forth. Sometimes the work goes slower than you would like.
Sometimes it is more painful than you would like. But the fact is, this
institution of government does work, and the people across the country
have to know that, even as we looked at this kind of torturous process
that followed the election we just completed. We are on to a new
Presidency. We are on to the hope for the next century, for the next
administration at least, that America will be able to continue to
enforce its leadership in the world, not only militarily or
functionally, but morally as well.
So, Mr. President, it has been quite a go that I have had, to use the
expression. I worked very hard for my State. I love New Jersey. I was
born there. We have had Members in Congress there from both parties,
and we worked together on a variety of joint Federal and
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State matters such as transportation, health care, and welfare. We had
Governors such as Tom Kean, Jim Florio, and the present Governor
Christine Todd Whitman. We were able to put politics aside and work
together for the good of the people of the State of New Jersey. I am
deeply grateful to the people of New Jersey. I thank them for putting
their trust in me by sending me to the U.S. Senate for three terms. I
hope I have made good on their trust and did the job they elected me to
do.
I welcome John Corzine, who is going to take this seat in the 107th
Congress. He is a terrific fellow. He is going to do an excellent job,
in my view. I was pleased to work with him in the election and, as a
matter of fact, through these past couple of weeks as well, to see if I
could be of help to him as he gets himself established, ready to take
on the assignments of the Senate as Senator from New Jersey.
I also extend my thanks to President Bill Clinton and Vice President
Al Gore. Their leadership in the past 8 years has resulted in
unprecedented growth and prosperity for our country. For that I am
grateful. Their leadership also helped us solve some of the problems
that beset the world, whether it was in Kosovo or Ireland, where
division and torment and violence existed for so many years. It is
working its way slowly to a peaceful coexistence between the parties
there. President Clinton deserves enormous credit for that and our
intervention in Kosovo to stop the killing and abuse of people there.
We look at the Clinton years as years of good government, of good
accomplishment, to say President Clinton and Vice President Gore will
be remembered for the good things they brought to this country.
I thank my staff, perhaps the most loyal anyone could have, and many
of them are here tonight and have stayed with me, as they say, to the
end. Many of them have their own concerns, their own families, their
own futures, their own careers to look after, but they stuck by, and we
continued to get things accomplished--even this, though it is my last
active day as a Senator, though I will be a Senator until January 3. My
staff and I are showing we are still fighting to get things done.
I was pleased with the outcome for Amtrak. Our people have worked
long hours with great energy. They are talented, professional, bright,
skilled people who are totally committed to our common view of public
service. Whether it was in my personal office, State offices, Budget or
Appropriations Committees, my people made enormous contributions day in
and day out, and my service has been enriched and made more effective
by their contribution.
I have had some great people on the staff over the years who have
dedicated their time and energy to advance our agenda. They have been
outstanding public servants, anonymously serving the public interest,
not elected but just as dedicated as anyone who has been elected to
office.
I want to take a few minutes to name for the Record people such as
Eve Lubalin, my first legislative director, who served for many years
as my chief of staff and campaign manager as well. She worked on so
many of our accomplishments in 17 years in my office.
Mitchell Oster worked on my 1982 campaign and later was my
legislative director. He was an excellent, smart, aggressive staffer.
A friend of mine who worked with me as a press secretary and State
director is Jim McQueeny.
James Carville and Paul Begala managed my campaign in 1988. I hope
that was part of the propulsion that led them to the lofty positions
they had in campaign logistics and successes.
Karin Elkis has been on my staff since 1983.
Bruce King is the staff director of the Senate Budget Committee.
Sandy Lurie, my current chief of staff, has been on the staff for 10
years and has been involved in so many of my initiatives.
Maggie Moran is my State director.
Dan Katz, my outstanding legislative director, has helped me with so
many public health issues.
Tom Dosh has worked for me for 18 years, skillfully running the
administrative and financial management side of all my offices.
And my long-time assistant Eleanor Popeck has worked for me for over
35 years. She was with me as an assistant when I ran ADP and has worked
in my Washington office and Newark office as well. She is an
outstanding public servant. Her contributions have been significant.
Peter Rogoff has worked with me on the Appropriations Transportation
Subcommittee for over 10 years and has assisted me with so many major
transportation accomplishments.
There are many others over the years, and I wish I had time to
mention them all. That would be disagreeable with some of the people in
the Chamber. I ask unanimous consent to print in the Record a list of
my key staffers over the years.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
Staff Since January 1999 and Other Key Staff
Amy Abraham, Jeff Acconzo, Sharon Anderson, Nisha Antony,
Claudia Arko, Renee Ashe, Bill Ayala, John Bang, Lisa
Baranello, Frederic Baron.
Karyn Barr, Gabrielle Batkin, Steve Benson, Maggie
Bierwith, Patrick Bogenberger, Natalie Broadnax, Dana
Brookes, Aaron Brusch, Scott Campbell, Cathy Carpino.
Rock Chueng, Sally Cluthe, Todd Coleman, Bill Crawley,
Debbie Curto, Christy Davis, Sallie Derr, Nicole Di Lella,
Tom Dosh, Andrea Edwards.
Karin Elkis, Val Ellicott, Rob Elliott, Ron Eritano, Jim
Esquea, Kyra Fischbeck, Alex Formuzis, Alison Fox, Lorenzo
Goco, Lisa Haage.
Heidi Hess, Melissa Holsinger, David Hoover, Louis Imhof,
Dan Katz, Bruce King, Lisa Konwinski, Peter Kurdock, Lou
Januzzi, Andrew Larkin.
Vanessa Lawson, Josh Lease, Steve Leraris, Mada Liebman,
Julie Lloyd, Ruth Lodder, Eve Lubalin, Sander Lurie, Amy
Maron, Colleen Mason.
Denise Matthews, Katie Melone, Melissa Miller, Maggie
Moran, Courtenay Morris, Marty Morris, John Mruz, Sue Nelson,
Mark Nevins, Liz O'Donoghue.
Tony Orza, Deborah Perugini, Blenda Pinto, Lisa Plevin,
Michael Pock, Ellie Popeck, Peter Rogoff, Mike Rose, Nadine
Rosenbaum, Jon Rosenwasser.
Nikki Roy, Peter Saharko, Laurie Saroff, Dawn Savarese,
Jack Schnirman, Paul Seltman, Jeff Siegel, Retha Sherrod,
Tralonne Shorter, Lisa Singleton.
Monica Slater Stokes, Arvind Swamy, Beth Tarczynski, Keith
Totaro, Kathy Unzicker-Byrd, Chip Unruh, Raj Wadhwani,
Barbara Wallace, Mitch Warren, Sharon Waxman, Ted Zegers.
Mr. LAUTENBERG. Finally, Mr. President, this is not a day without
emotion. Eighteen years of my life have been spent here, 18 of the most
satisfying years one could imagine. Couple that with some 3 years in
the Army, and I have served the Government for 20 years.
I have enjoyed it all. It has been an incredible learning experience
for me, but I owe a special thanks to four people: My four children,
Ellen, Nan, Lisa, and Josh. I asked them in the early stages what they
thought about my running for office. I was chairman of a very large
company, and life was pretty good. They all agreed that it was
something I ought to do. We did not realize at the time what kind of an
interference with normal family life it would be. It has taken lots of
time away from our enjoyment of doing things together.
I came to the Senate because I love them so dearly that I wanted to
make sure their lives would be safer and fuller. How was that to be
accomplished? It was not by earning more assets and resources. I knew
my children and my grandchildren could never be as safe as I would like
them to be unless everybody's children were as safe as they should be
by getting rid of violence in the streets, in the communities, in the
neighborhoods, in the schools.
How does one do that? I could not single my kids out and say, OK,
let's make sure they are safe and protected. No, I had to say all
people's children have to be safe and protected, and that is what I
have tried to do here.
That was my inspiration. That outlined the goals I set for myself.
That is why I wanted to raise the drinking age, lower the blood alcohol
content, get guns out of people's houses, reduce smoking in public
areas, make sure toxic chemicals were known throughout the communities
in the Right To Know Act, and make sure terrorists did not run freely
through our society or through the world chasing American citizens,
abusing them, killing them.
I tried. I have not accomplished all of those things, but a lot of
them have been accomplished. I wanted the highways to be safer and the
skyways to be
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safer because of the belief I had that people around the country would
share my view on that.
Now the pictures are off the wall, the furniture is moved out, the
day is closing for the end of my Senate service. I will acknowledge
that it was more than skills and knowledge that brought me here. Some
of that was the pure good fortune of the people of New Jersey electing
me the first time I went out to run for office. They did not know me
from anybody else, but they looked at the record my company had and how
we built it from nothing to something important. They looked at my
service as commissioner of the Port Authority of New Jersey and New
York that controls the bridges, tunnels, terminals, and buildings in
New York that was an appointed post. People looked at me and said:
Well, we don't know this guy, but it looks like he has done some things
correctly. They saw pictures of my family. They know how devoted I am
to them. I also was chairman of one of the largest charities of the
world for 3 years. They entrusted me with this seat, the New Jersey
seat, that I occupied for 18 years. I always refrain from calling it
``my seat'' because it is not; I filled it for a while.
In closing, I thank the occupant of the chair for the opportunities
we have had to share common goals and for his decency in reviewing
those with me and having an open mind on many of the issues. I thank my
friend from Nevada who stands as the guardsman of the floor in his
assignment for the Democrats as the whip, and I note the respect I felt
for him when I saw how arduously he worked to protect his State from
becoming a nuclear dump, even when we struggled to find a place to put
that material --and we do have to find a place. The fact of the matter
is, if we defend the interests of our States in concert with the
interests of our country, we will have done our jobs correctly.
I hope the legacy I leave will create a brighter future for the
people who sent me here, for my eight wonderful grandchildren, and for
all of those I took the oath to serve.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
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