[Congressional Record Volume 155, Number 168 (Tuesday, November 10, 2009)]
[Senate]
[Pages S11320-S11334]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




     MILITARY CONSTRUCTION, VETERANS AFFAIRS, AND RELATED AGENCIES 
                  APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2010--Continued

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Maryland.
  Ms. MIKULSKI. Mr. President, I rise to speak on the bill and urge its 
quick and prompt adoption.
  In doing so, I wish to pay tribute to a fallen warrior from the State 
of Maryland who died in the terrible massacre at Fort Hood. I wish to 
express my condolences to all families who suffered the loss of life or 
were injured at that terrible shooting. It was a terrible tragedy for 
them at Fort Hood, for their families, and for our country.
  We know the 13 families are now dealing with the loss of loved ones, 
and 30 other families have members who were wounded in the attack. We 
in Maryland suffered a casualty as well. I am here today to pay my 
respects and express my condolences to the family of LTC Juanita 
Warman, a wonderful woman who moved to Maryland 5 years ago as a call 
to duty. She had a 25-year military career in both the Active and 
Reserve Army. She devoted her career to serving fellow soldiers.
  Lieutenant Colonel Warman was a nurse practitioner. Her field was in 
psychiatric and emotional counseling. She served in other parts of the 
country and came as a call to duty to Perry Point Veterans Hospital in 
Maryland. There she served to help our wounded warriors. Perry Point is 
the designated facility in Maryland to help wounded warriors, those who 
bear the permanent injury of war, who bear the wounds of either 
emotional or mental illness. She was absolutely on their side. She was 
viewed as a consummate professional by her colleagues and by the people 
who relied upon her for her talented counseling.
  A master's degree in nursing, she was an expert in posttraumatic 
stress as well as traumatic brain injury. She devoted her career to 
helping these soldiers as she did her family. Her family saw her as a 
mother to two, a grandmother to eight, and two stepchildren as well. 
She was raised in a military family. She understood the bonds between 
fellow soldiers. She also volunteered as part of a program called the 
Maryland Yellow Ribbon Program to help soldiers reintegrate into the 
community. She developed guidelines to dispel myths about PTSD. She 
particularly would reach out to women soldiers who had unique 
challenges, both in their own life and the lives of their families.
  She provided mental health counseling to soldiers coming out of a war 
zone trying to come into a family zone so that family zone didn't 
become a battleground as well. She also was well known for her work at 
Ramstein Hospital. She traveled there in many instances to help our 
soldiers make the transition from battlefield to the hospital in 
Germany to back here. She received an Army commendation medal for her 
meritorious service at Ramstein. She was a great soldier.
  She was at Fort Hood less than 24 hours. She was getting ready to 
deploy to Iraq. She was ready to go, though she was sad to go. From her 
last posting on Facebook, she knew she would be away for the holidays 
from her beloved husband Philip, her children, grandchildren, and 
stepchildren. But there were no stepchildren; they were all her 
children to Lieutenant Colonel Warman.
  We are going to miss her. Her family is going to miss her. We are 
going to miss her in Maryland because she was an active member of the 
community. The Army is going to miss her. Most of all, those who need 
mental health counseling will miss her. We are so sorry this happened 
to her.
  There will be those who will want to wear yellow ribbons and black 
armbands and have flags at half mast. And we should. We should do all 
the symbols to honor what happened to those who fell at Fort Hood. But 
the best way to honor the people in the massacre at Fort Hood, to honor 
the people who have been wounded in Iraq or Afghanistan is to pass this 
legislation.
  The legislation pending is the Military Construction and VA health 
bill. There is so much good in this bill that will provide medical 
services to those who bear the permanent and sometimes invisible wounds 
of war. While we want to salute those who fell at Fort Hood and on the 
battlegrounds of Iraq and Afghanistan, the way we honor their memory 
and their service, the service of all who have been abroad, is by 
making sure when they come home, they get the medical and social 
services they need, a bridge to get them back into civilian life.
  Again, my condolences to the Warman family and to all who fell, but 
most of all I thank everybody for their service. Let's thank them not 
only with words but with deeds. Let's pass this bill.
  I yield the floor.


                Amendment No. 2740 to Amendment No. 2730

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Hawaii.
  Mr. AKAKA. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the pending 
amendment be set aside.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. AKAKA. I call up amendment No. 2740 and ask for its 
consideration.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from Hawaii [Mr. Akaka] proposes an amendment 
     numbered 2740.

  The amendment is as follows:

    (Purpose: To extend the authority for a regional office of the 
   Department of Veterans Affairs in the Republic of the Philippines)

       On page 52, after line 21, add the following:
       Sec. 229.  Section 315(b) of title 38, United States Code, 
     is amended by striking ``December 31, 2009'' and inserting 
     ``December 31, 2010''.

  Mr. AKAKA. I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Washington.
  Mrs. MURRAY. Mr. President, this week, thousands of families across 
our country are stopping to honor the

[[Page S11321]]

memory of those who have served for us because of Veterans Day tomorrow 
and to thank them for all they have done to protect and defend our 
country. It is a time when many American families are watching what is 
unfolding at Fort Hood this week. It is a time in my State where today 
we are having a memorial service at Fort Lewis honoring seven soldiers 
who lost their lives a few days ago in Afghanistan. Our hearts and 
condolences go out to those families who have suffered the ultimate 
loss, especially at this time when everyone is recognizing the 
tremendous sacrifice so many people have given.
  As a Senator from a State with a very large military presence and 
communities that are heavily populated with the men and women who 
dedicate their lives to protecting our country, I was particularly 
saddened by the senseless violence that ripped through our Nation's 
largest active-duty base last Thursday. As anyone who has ever spent 
time on a U.S. military base knows well, those are some of our most 
safe and compassionate communities in the entire country. They are 
places where a young family plants roots and raises a child and 
establishes a life for themselves. They are a place where military 
spouses form bonds that they carry with them throughout their 
deployments. They are a place where neighbors always lend a hand to 
those in need. I have seen that firsthand at places such as Fort Lewis 
Army Base in Tacoma and Fairchild Air Force Base in Spokane. I know the 
pain of the loss of those 13 public servants extends to everyone at 
Fort Hood and to the U.S. military community as a whole.
  I wish to make special mention today of Michael Grant Cahill who came 
from Spokane, WA. He was the lone civilian killed in that attack. He 
was a physician's assistant who worked in rural clinics and veterans 
hospitals, places where our veterans desperately need care and we 
desperately need workers. At the time of his death, he was only 4 years 
from retirement. In an interview with the Spokesman-Review newspaper a 
day after her father was killed, Cahill's daughter Keely told the paper 
that her dad was ``a wonderful person, that he loved his job and loved 
working with people and helping them with their physical needs.''
  My thoughts and prayers are with Keely and the family members of all 
those who died or were wounded and the U.S. military families who are 
still reeling from this tragedy.
  To the families who have lost soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan 
recently, especially those having military services today in my home 
State of Washington at Fort Lewis as well as many others, I want them 
to know that we know we are their voice and we need to stand up for 
them. As we all know, Veterans Day tomorrow is a day we celebrate and 
honor the great sacrifices all veterans have made. It is because of 
their sacrifice that we can safely enjoy the freedoms our country 
offers. It is because of their unmatched commitment that America can 
remain a beacon for democracy and freedom throughout the world.
  Growing up I saw firsthand the many ways military service can affect 
both veterans and their families. My father served in World War II. He 
was among the first soldiers to land in Okinawa. He came home as a 
disabled veteran and was awarded the Purple Heart. Like many soldiers 
of my dad's generation, he didn't talk about his experiences during the 
war. In fact, we only learned about what he did and his heroism when he 
passed away, and we found his journals and read them. I think that 
experience offers a larger lesson about veterans in general. They are 
very reluctant to call attention to their service, and they are 
reluctant to ask for help. That is why we have to publicly recognize 
their sacrifices and contributions. It is up to all of us to make sure 
they get the recognition they have earned and, by the way, not only on 
Veterans Day. Our veterans held up their end of the deal. We have to 
hold up ours.
  Veterans Day must not only be a day of remembrance, it must also be a 
day of reflection. It is a chance for all of us to reflect on our own 
responsibilities to our Nation's veterans. It is a chance to look at 
what we can do to make sure we are keeping the promise we made to our 
men and women when they signed up to serve. It is a chance to take 
stock of where care and benefits have fallen short, where new needs are 
emerging, and how we can make it easier for veterans to get the care 
and benefits they deserve.
  It is appropriate that on the eve of this very important day, 
Veterans Day, we are working to pass a bill that takes a hard look at 
many of the challenges facing veterans and their families. It is a bill 
that is the product of collaboration with veterans, their families, 
caregivers, and scores of veterans service organizations.
  As a member of the Veterans' Affairs Committee, I am aware we have a 
lot of work to do for the men and women who serve our country. Not only 
must we continually strive to keep up our commitment to veterans from 
all wars, but we also have to respond to the new and different issues 
facing veterans who are returning from Iraq and Afghanistan, wars that 
are being fought under conditions that are very different from those of 
the past. That is precisely what the caregiver and veterans omnibus 
health bill seeks to do.
  One of the changes we have seen in our veterans population recently 
is the growing number of women veterans who are seeking care at the VA. 
Today more women are serving in the military than ever before. Over the 
next 5 years, the amount of women seeking care at the VA is expected to 
double. Not only are women answering the call to serve at unprecedented 
levels, they are also often serving in a very different capacity. In 
Iraq and Afghanistan, we have seen wars that don't have traditional 
front lines. All of our servicemembers, including women, find 
themselves on the front lines. Whether it is working at a checkpoint or 
helping to search and clear neighborhoods or supporting supply convoys, 
women servicemembers face many of the same risks from IEDs and ambushes 
as their male counterparts. But while the nature of their service has 
changed in these conflicts, the VA has been very slow to change the 
nature of the care they provide when these women return home.
  Today at the VA there is an insufficient number of doctors and staff 
with specific training and experience in women's health issues. Even 
the VA's own internal studies have shown that women veterans are 
underserved. That is why we included in the veterans health bill a bill 
I have introduced and worked on that will enable the VA to better 
understand and ultimately treat the unique needs of female veterans. 
The bill authorizes a number of new programs and studies, including a 
comprehensive look at the barriers women currently face when they try 
to get care at the VA. It includes a study of women who have served in 
Iraq and Afghanistan to assess how those conflicts affected their 
health. It includes a requirement that the VA implement a program to 
train and educate and certify VA mental health professionals to care 
for women with sexual trauma and a pilot program that provides 
childcare to women veterans who seek mental health care services at the 
VA because, as we know, women will choose to take care of their kids 
before they take care of themselves. I believe we need to provide that 
childcare so those women get the care they need.

  This bill I am talking about is the result of many discussions with 
women veterans on the unique and very personal problems they face when 
they return home from war. Oftentimes, when I hold veterans meetings in 
my State, the men who are there speak up and talk to me about some of 
the barriers they face, and it is not until the meeting closes and 
everybody is going out the door that the women come up to me and speak 
silently and as quietly as they can in my ear about the barriers they 
face. Some of these women have told me they did not even view 
themselves as a veteran and therefore did not even think of seeking 
care at the VA. Oftentimes, they have told me they lack privacy at 
their local VA or they felt intimidated when they walked in the doors. 
They have told me about being forced into a caregiving role that 
prevented them from even asking for care because they had to struggle 
to find a babysitter in order to keep an appointment. They should not 
have to speak quietly into my ear at the end of a meeting. They have 
served our country honorably. We should move this women veterans health 
bill so they get the care they support.

[[Page S11322]]

  To me and to the bipartisan group of Senators who cosponsored the 
women veterans bill, these barriers to care they face are unacceptable. 
So as we now have more women transitioning back home and stepping back 
into their careers and their lives as mothers and wives, this VA has to 
be there for them. So this bill in the omnibus bill in front of us will 
help the VA to modernize to meet those needs.
  Another way this bill meets the changing needs of our veterans is in 
the area of assisting caregivers in the home.
  As we have seen in Iraq and Afghanistan, medical advances have helped 
save the lives of many of our servicemembers who in previous conflicts 
would have perished from the severity of their wounds. But these 
medical miracles mean that many of those who have been catastrophically 
wounded now need round-the-clock care when they come home.
  In many of our rural areas, where access to health care services is 
very limited, the burden of providing that care often--and most often--
falls on the family of that severely injured veteran. For those family 
members who are providing care to their loved ones, it now becomes a 
full-time job for them. They often, I have been told, have to quit 
their current jobs--forfeiting not only their source of income but also 
their own health care insurance at the same time. It is a sacrifice 
that is far too great, especially for families who have already 
sacrificed so much.
  So this underlying omnibus bill we are trying to bring forward 
provides caregivers with health care and counseling and support and, 
importantly, a stipend so they can take care of their loved ones when 
they come home.
  This bill also takes steps to provide dental insurance to veterans 
and survivors and their dependents and improves mental health care 
services and eases the transition from Active Duty to civilian life. It 
expands outreach and technology so we can provide better care for 
veterans in our rural areas. And it initiates three programs to address 
homelessness among veterans, which is especially troubling during these 
economic times.
  This is a bill that is supported by numerous veterans service 
organizations and the VA. It is supported by many leading medical 
groups. It was passed in our Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee with 
broad bipartisan support after hearings with health care experts and VA 
officials and veterans and, importantly, their families.
  Like other omnibus veterans health care bills before it--bills that 
have often been passed on this floor with overwhelming support--it puts 
veterans before politics. It is a bipartisan bill designed to move 
swiftly so its programs can be implemented swiftly. It is a bipartisan 
bill that is designed to make sure our veterans do not become political 
pawns. Yet here we are today facing delays.
  The fact that this bill is now being held hostage by ideology is both 
a disservice to our veterans and a troubling precedent for our future 
efforts to meet their needs. Providing for our veterans used to be an 
area where political affiliation fell by the wayside. But today, 
because of an effort to score political points on issues that are far 
removed from the struggles of families who are delivering care to their 
loved ones with injuries or women veterans who are returning home to an 
unprepared VA or the mounting toll of this economy on homeless 
veterans, we are faced with delay on the floor. For our Nation's 
veterans, it is a delay they cannot afford. Our aging veterans and the 
brave men and women who are currently serving in Iraq and Afghanistan 
need our help now. And how we treat them at this critical time will 
send a signal to a generation of young people who might now be sitting 
at home considering whether they want to go into the military.
  It is imperative that we keep our promise to our veterans--the same 
promise Abraham Lincoln made to America's veterans 140 years ago--``to 
care for the veteran who has borne the battle, his widow and his 
orphan.''
  Our veterans have waited long enough for many of the improvements in 
this bill. We should not ask them to wait any longer. So I urge our 
colleague to withdraw his objection to consideration of this bill and 
to let us move it quickly through the Senate so the families and the 
servicemembers who are waiting for its passage--whether it is a family 
taking care of a veteran who has been seriously injured or a woman 
veteran or anyone who has served our country--can know we stand behind 
them when they serve our country.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  Mr. JOHNSON. Mr. President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. WEBB. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. WEBB. Mr. President, may I ask the Chair, are we in morning 
business?
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senate is considering the appropriations 
bill.
  Mr. WEBB. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in 
morning business.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
  Without objection, it is so ordered.


                 Frank Buckles World War I Memorial Act

  Mr. WEBB. Mr. President, I actually came to the floor to join with 
Senator Thune and to congratulate him on the effort he has undertaken 
to rededicate a site in Washington, DC, to become the National World 
War I Memorial. I am an original cosponsor on that legislation, and 
apparently he is tied up in some sort of meeting right now, so I will 
just precede him and give my thoughts and my support for the 
legislation he has introduced.


                      Marine Corps 234th Birthday

  Before I do that, Mr. President, I would like to point out that this 
is November 10, and marines around the world stop on this day every 
year--no matter where they are, no matter what they are doing--to 
commemorate what we call the Marine Corps birthday, which is the 
celebration of the initial recruitment and organization of the Marine 
Corps, at a place called Tun Tavern in Philadelphia in 1775.
  This is the 234th anniversary of the founding of the Marine Corps. As 
one who has proudly served in the U.S. Marines, who has a brother who 
was a marine, a son who is a marine, and a son-in-law--three of us 
infantry combat veterans--I would like to extend my congratulations to 
all of those who served in the Marine Corps in the past and to those 
who are doing such a fine and difficult job today all around the world. 
This is the finest fighting organization in the world, and I am very 
proud to have been a part of it at one point in my life.

  We all wish success and the best to our marines.


                 Frank Buckles World War I Memorial Act

  Mr. President, tomorrow is Veterans Day, where we will stop as a 
nation with a national holiday to commemorate the service of all of 
those who have served our country throughout our history and to thank 
the 23.4 million veterans in this country for the service they have 
given in war and in peace, extending all the way back, in terms of 
living veterans, to World War I, which I am going to talk about in a 
minute. I think we have one surviving veteran from World War I still 
alive. We have some 2.6 million World War II veterans who are still 
with us. And we want to, as so many people have pointed out today, do 
our best to take care of those who have served our country, to honor 
that service.
  With respect to the legislation Senator Thune put together and on 
which I am an original cosponsor, we should stop today and think about 
those who served in World War I. I think the memorial he is proposing 
has three important benefits to our country. The first is that it will 
help us remember a war that I think is not really appropriately 
remembered in our own history--the importance of it, the incredible 
carnage that took place, the way it changed the face of the civilized 
world. The second is to think about our own World War I veterans and 
the struggles they went through and in terms of putting together the 
right sort of care and benefits for those who followed them. The third 
is to talk about the site itself that Senator Thune has done such a 
fine job in discovering and proposing.
  We in this country did not get involved in World War I until the very

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end of the war. I think that is one of the reasons, perhaps, we do not 
consider in enough detail how much of an impact that war had on the 
civilized world as it was then known, on the relationships particularly 
among the European powers, and also the place of the United States in 
world affairs.
  These numbers are rough, but they are fairly close; I think they are 
accurate enough that I can use them today: In World War I, the German 
Army lost 1.8 million soldiers, dead; the French lost 1.7 million 
soldiers, dead; the British Empire lost nearly a million soldiers, 
dead. The impact on those cultures and on the economy and the health of 
the communities was enormous. We came in at the end of the war. The 
United States lost 55,000 soldiers on the battlefield in less than a 
year. We lost another 55,000 to the Asian flu epidemic that swept 
through the world and had a very strong impact on those who were 
serving in the military. We lost 110,000 people in uniform during that 
war.
  The impact it had on the relationships among European countries was 
enormous, and it is much more fully understood in other countries than 
it is here in the United States. The Russian Revolution occurred during 
World War I. The way we negotiated the settlement after World War I 
brought about, within a short period of time, the rise of fascism and, 
eventually, of nazism in Germany. The British Empire began to spend 
itself down in a way that finally had a fairly conclusive impact after 
the additional carnage of World War II.
  All of those things impacted this country in a way that pushed us to 
the forefront in many ways in terms of our place in the world because 
of the exhaustion that had happened in these other societies.
  Our World War I veterans had a very difficult time in a transitional 
period in terms of how we define veterans' benefits themselves. 
Previous to World War I, when soldiers left the military, they got what 
was called mustering-out pay, and when they reached a certain age, no 
matter what their service was in terms of disability or those sorts of 
things, they got a pension, an automatic pension, all the way through 
our history until World War I. World War I veterans didn't get either 
of those.
  Some of us who are fond of looking at American history in the 1930s 
will remember the Veterans Bonus March, where World War I veterans 
literally camped out here in our Nation's Capital, saying they needed 
to get the same kind of bonuses that those who had preceded them 
received. They didn't receive that bonus. They did fight hard and long 
and were able to bring about the creation of the VA medical system, but 
they didn't get a GI bill; they didn't get so many things the other 
veterans who followed them received. Yet when I was much younger and 
working as a committee counsel in the House on veterans issues, we were 
still seeing the World War I veterans. They felt a stewardship to those 
who served in World War II. They helped push through the GI bill. They 
helped push through compensation packages that were unheard of before. 
We owe our World War I veterans a great deal, not simply for what they 
did on the battlefield but for how they helped transform veterans law 
into today.
  The site Senator Thune proposed--and with which I agree--for a World 
War I memorial, I believe, is perfectly placed. We are all very 
sensitive in terms of putting additional memorials and monuments on The 
National Mall. I was involved in the formulation stages of the Vietnam 
Veterans Memorial on The Mall. That was one of the big push-backs in 
Congress, as well as from the National Capital Planning Commission and 
other entities; that we don't want to put so many memorials on The Mall 
that you impact the free flow of tourists and people visiting that 
area.
  Right now, here is what we have on The Mall. I wish I had a diagram, 
but we have the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, just down from the Lincoln 
Memorial, and to its south we have the Korean War Memorial and further 
to the east, toward the Washington Monument, we have the World War II 
Memorial. Almost in a diagrammatic diamond there is an area presently 
where the District of Columbia was allowed to place a memorial to those 
who had served in World War I and were residents of the District of 
Columbia.
  What Senator Thune has proposed, and what I strongly also support, is 
to take this existing memorial, which is in some disrepair at the 
moment, quite frankly--I have been by there a number of times--and to 
upgrade it so it would become the National World War I Memorial, so we 
would have on The Mall, in a very tasteful way, four sites dedicated to 
the four major wars our country was involved in, in the 20th century. I 
can't think of a better way right now for us to recommend and remember 
the service of those who served in World War I and for the rest of the 
people in this country also to be encouraged to remember the impact 
that war had and the sacrifices the people who served in that war made.
  So I rise, as I mentioned earlier, to commend the Senator from South 
Dakota for his recommendation, as well as, as I said, to remember the 
Marine Corps today and to remember our veterans tomorrow.
  With that, I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from South Dakota is recognized.
  Mr. THUNE. Mr. President, I wish to join my colleague from Virginia 
in support of this legislation and I thank him for his leadership on 
this and on so many of the other issues and initiatives that recognize 
the service and sacrifice of America's veterans. He has been a leader 
on that, and I appreciate his leadership on this issue because I think, 
as we prepare to observe Veterans Day tomorrow, it is important to 
recognize those veterans who served throughout our Nation's history. 
Along with Senator Rockefeller, Senator Webb and I have introduced 
legislation that is known as the Frank Buckles World War I Memorial 
Act, which recognizes, once and for all, those veterans who served 
their country during World War I.
  Frank Buckles's World War I Memorial Act would rededicate the 
existing District of Columbia War Memorial as the National and District 
of Columbia World War I Memorial on The National Mall in Washington, 
DC. The act is named for Frank Buckles of West Virginia who, at 108 
years of age, is the last surviving American World War I veteran.
  I appreciate the strong support of Senator Rockefeller who, of 
course, has Frank Buckles as a constituent, and I appreciate also the 
strong support of Senator Webb for this bill. Senator Burr, the ranking 
member of the Committee on Veterans' Affairs, is also a cosponsor, so 
it has strong and meaningful support on both sides of the aisle.
  As I said, I think it is very fitting to speak on a bill seeking to 
establish a national World War I memorial because, as many know, 
Veterans Day was initially known as Armistice Day, which marked the end 
of World War I on November 11 of 1918.
  After America's role in World War II and the Korean war, Congress 
passed legislation changing Armistice Day to Veterans Day, and 
President Eisenhower signed the change into law on June 1, 1954. From 
initially being a day to honor World War I veterans, November 11 became 
a day to honor all veterans.
  We are rapidly nearing a century since the beginning of World War I, 
which began for most of the world in July of 1914. While World War I 
has become a distant, fading memory of another era, it still profoundly 
shapes the world in which we live.
  As Oxford historian Hew Strachan concludes in his history of the 
first World War, the war ``forced a reluctant United States onto the 
world stage'' and began to ``lay the seeds for the conflict in the 
Middle East. In short, it shaped not just Europe but the world in the 
20th century.''
  World War I began for the United States when it entered the war in 
April of 1917 on the western front because of German submarine attacks 
on United States shipping and because President Woodrow Wilson 
concluded that the United States had to wage war if it was to shape the 
future of international relations, as Hew Strachan states in his 
history of World War I.
  The United States was in World War I for only 18 months. Its Army 
grew from only 100,000 men to 4 million, with 2 million men sent 
overseas, 1\1/2\ million of whom arrived in Europe in the last 6 months 
of the war. Forty-two American divisions were in the field by November 
11 in 1918, and 29 of them had

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seen action. Over 100,000 American soldiers died in World War I.
  Frank Buckles is the last surviving American World War I veteran. He 
was born in Missouri and currently lives in West Virginia. He joined 
the Army at 16 and went to Europe to fight in 1917, driving ambulances 
and motorcycles for a casualty detachment. He was discharged from the 
Army in 1919. Mr. Buckles also was extraordinarily affected by World 
War II. He was in Manila as a civilian on business in December of 1941, 
when the Japanese attacked, and was captured by the Japanese and spent 
4 years in a Japanese prison camp in the Philippines. I strongly urge 
everyone to track down his interview, where he talks about his war 
experiences in both World War I and World War II. Transcripts and 
videos of Frank Buckles' interview can be found on the Library of 
Congress's Veterans History Project Web site. The Veterans History 
Project is a great initiative. I have taken advantage of the Veterans 
History Project myself, to interview my dad about his experiences as a 
pilot in World War II.
  Mr. Buckles is also the honorary chairman of the World War I Memorial 
Foundation, which is seeking refurbishment of the District of Columbia 
War Memorial and its establishment as the National World War I Memorial 
on The National Mall. The Frank Buckles World War I Memorial Act will 
help to make this vision a reality.
  I had the opportunity to meet Mr. Buckles last year. He is certainly 
an extraordinary individual. Mr. Buckles also traveled to South Dakota 
in July of 2008 to be honored at Mount Rushmore during their 
magnificent Fourth of July celebration. It is a great honor for me to 
support this bill that carries his name.
  I wish to briefly describe what the bill does. In 1924, Congress 
authorized the construction of a war memorial on The National Mall near 
the Lincoln Memorial to honor the 499 District of Columbia residents 
who died in World War I. Funded by private donations from organizations 
and individuals, the memorial was dedicated by President Herbert Hoover 
on November 11, 1931. The Frank Buckles World War I Memorial Act would 
rededicate the District of Columbia Memorial as the National and 
District of Columbia World War I Memorial. The legislation would also 
authorize the nonprofit World War I Memorial Foundation to make repairs 
and improvements to the existing memorial, as well as install new 
sculptures to underscore the sacrifice of over 4 million Americans who 
served in World War I.

  The bill would not require any taxpayer dollars because the World War 
I Memorial Foundation would raise the necessary funds through private 
donations.
  All the major wars our Nation has fought in the 20th century are 
memorialized on The National Mall. Rededicating the District of 
Columbia World War I Memorial as the National and District of Columbia 
World War I Memorial fits the narrative of The Mall, with its wonderful 
memorials to World War II, the Korean war, and the Vietnam war. I think 
it only makes sense to rededicate a memorial to this 20th century war 
that established our Nation's path to superpower status among the 
community of nations.
  This Veterans Day will mark the 91st anniversary of the end of World 
War I. I can think of no better way to honor Mr. Buckles and his 
departed comrades than by quickly passing this bill to establish a 
national World War I memorial. This bill would provide timely but long 
overdue recognition of all World War I veterans in our Nation's 
capital. I look forward to working with my colleagues to pass this bill 
as soon as possible.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois is recognized.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, let me join the Presiding Officer, the 
Senator from Virginia, Mr. Webb, and Senator Thune in endorsing the 
concept of this World War I memorial. I am a student--a minor, amateur 
student of history, and I realize the dramatic impact that war had on 
the United States. It is amazing to know there is still a surviving 
veteran from that great conflict.
  When I first got involved in politics, I would go to rural counties 
in Illinois, and there would be a flatbed truck with five or six World 
War I vets on it. Of course, they are gone. They were a great 
generation that sacrificed and engaged in a war so far away at such 
great peril. It is fitting that there be an update of that monument. I 
have walked by it. In its day, I am sure it was a glorious monument, 
but it needs attention today for it to be a fitting tribute to the men 
and women who served our Nation during that great conflict. I heartily 
support it. I wish to thank Senator Johnson, the chairman of this 
appropriations subcommittee, for entertaining this as part of his 
legislation.
  I will tell my colleagues we had a press conference today on another 
issue involving veterans. It is one that means a lot to me, personally, 
because it involves a family whom I have become very close to. It is 
the Edmondson family. They live in North Carolina. I met them by chance 
when Eric Edmondson, who was a veteran of the war in Iraq, was being 
treated at a hospital in Chicago. Eric was a victim of a traumatic 
brain injury and in surgery after his injury there was deprivation of 
oxygen and he has become a quadriplegic and cannot speak. When I first 
met him 2 years ago, he was 27 years old, a husband and father of a 
little baby girl. I met his father Ed and his mother Marybeth. They 
were people who came to a hearing I held on veterans health care. They 
talked about the journey Eric had made from Iraq to the United States 
and then to Chicago to the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago.
  They had all but given up on Eric because of his injuries and, at one 
point, they told his father he would have to be admitted to a nursing 
home at the age of 27 because there was nothing they could do. It 
appeared he was headed in that direction until his father said: No, I 
won't do this to my son.
  What followed has been a heroic story--heroism matching, I believe, 
the courage his son showed in volunteering to serve our country and 
risk his life--because Eric's father, Ed, started his own personal 
effort to find the very best place in America for Eric's treatment. He 
came up with the Rehab Institute of Chicago.
  I went to visit Eric at the Rehab Institute, when he was there 2 
years ago. When I walked into the room, he was sitting in a wheelchair 
with a big smile. He cannot speak. We talked a little bit about his 
treatment there. They invited me to come back. I came back a few weeks 
later, about 6 weeks later, and they said Eric had a gift for me. I 
didn't know what they meant by that. His mother and dad each grabbed an 
elbow, stood him up, and Eric took four steps out of his wheelchair. It 
was an amazing moment. There wasn't a dry eye in that hospital room 
that day; that he had made the progress where he could literally take 
four steps. His father said he would be checking out of the Rehab 
Institute in Chicago a few weeks after that and invited me to come 
because, he said: Eric is going to put on his dress uniform and he is 
going to walk out the front door of this hospital.
  I said: I will be there. So was the mayor of Chicago and every other 
politician who heard about it, and every TV camera in Chicago was there 
to see Eric make it out the front door, with the help of two attendants 
by his side. There he was with a big smile on his face in his dress 
uniform.
  Well, Eric returned to North Carolina, and because of the amazing 
generosity of a lot of local people, they literally built him and his 
family a home that was wheelchair accessible. Because of that 
generosity, he had a place to live but still with a very young wife and 
a baby girl.
  His mother and father decided they would quit their jobs and move in 
with their son and become full-time caregivers to Eric Edmondson, this 
veteran of the Iraq war, and that is what happened. His father 
basically cashed in all his savings, sold his home, sold his business, 
took what he had and dedicated himself to his son--totally dedicated 
himself to his son.
  Over the period of time that Ed and Marybeth were taking care of 
Eric, they lost their health insurance. But Eric was still being cared 
for by the veterans system. I went down to visit them in their home. It 
was clear they spent every minute of every day caring for their son.
  Mr. Edmondson asked me to take a look at a bill that Senator Hillary 
Clinton had introduced called the Caregivers Assistance Act which said 
the

[[Page S11325]]

Veterans' Administration should start off on a demonstration basis to 
take a look at caregivers, such as the Edmondson family, and give them 
a helping hand. I asked Senator Clinton as she was leaving the Senate 
and heading for the State Department if I could take over the bill, and 
she said I could.
  I introduced it in this session of Congress. Senator Danny Akaka, the 
chairman of the Senate Veterans' Affairs Committee, read the bill and 
called me and said: I want to move this bill. I want to make it a major 
piece of legislation to help veterans. That bill was considered by the 
Veterans' Affairs Committee and was reported out unanimously.
  What the bill would do is create a program in the Veterans' 
Administration for caregivers, such as Ed and Marybeth Edmondson. What 
it would give them is training so they would know how to take care of 
their son, a disabled veteran--training in basic first aid and health 
care.
  Second, it would provide them with a monthly stipend which the 
Veterans' Administration would determine is appropriate so they would 
have some help in getting by with the expenses of keeping their family 
together and helping their veteran.
  It would also give them a respite for a couple weeks so at least they 
would be able to have some time off and others would come in and take 
care of the veteran while they went off and recharged their batteries 
and came back and dedicated themselves again to the veteran.
  It would provide basic health insurance for caregivers as well 
because that is one of the first things they lose when they give up a 
job or business to take on this responsibility.
  This is just one family's story from our recent war that still goes 
on. There are others. I met another one in Chicago on Sunday, Aimee 
Zmysly, who literally married her husband after he came home and became 
disabled from an operation at a veterans hospital. This 23-year-old 
woman married this young man who had no family and now is his full-time 
personal care attendant. Because of it, he can stay home; he is not in 
a formal facility.
  The cost of his care is a fraction of what it would be otherwise, and 
he has the dignity of being where he wants to be--with someone who 
loves him very much, who spends every moment of every day helping him.
  This is the right thing to do. This caregivers bill is the 
appropriate thing to do. For at least 6,000 veterans across America, 
there is a personal family caregiver who makes the difference every day 
in their lives, a person who will be there for them every second they 
need them. You cannot buy that kind of help. Even the best medical 
professionals could not provide the love that comes with that care.
  I think the Veterans' Administration, certainly the Senate Veterans' 
Affairs Committee, recognizes that. That is why this legislation is 
currently on the calendar of the Senate. It has been here now for over 
6 weeks. I had hoped we could pass this before this Veterans Day, 
tomorrow. But, unfortunately, it is being held by one Senator.
  The Senator and I debated it on the floor yesterday. He said he 
doesn't want us to even consider this bill. We cannot even debate this 
bill. He would not even offer an amendment to this bill. He wants to 
stop this bill, he said, because I haven't figured out a way to pay 
these caregivers.
  We reminded him that during the course of this war, we waged this war 
and paid for it with debt. The former administration did not pay for 
any of the war expenses. They added them to the debt of the United 
States. That Senator and others--myself included--voted to continue 
that war, understanding that it was not being paid for.
  Now when it comes to caring for the veterans and the casualties of 
that war, we have a strict accounting standard, a deficit standard that 
was not applied to waging a war. Why is it the cost of the war--the 
bullets and the bombs--does not have to be paid for, but when it comes 
to the care of our veterans who come home, we have this strict 
accounting; we cannot consider helping them unless there is some 
specific way of demonstrating how to pay for it?
  I believe we will pay for it, I believe we should have it, and I 
believe this Senator for veterans in 2009 should lift his hold on this 
bill and let us consider it on the Senate floor. Let us have this 
debate. Let us determine who will be covered by it and what kind of 
coverage they will have.
  These caregivers will not quit on us because they will not quit on 
their veteran. Why should we quit on them? Why should we say we are not 
going to provide them help when every moment of every day they are 
helping a man or woman who literally risked their lives for our country 
and paid a heavy price in doing so?
  I also have two other amendments. One of my amendments now pending 
before the Senate on this appropriations bill is the capstone of a 
project that I have been working on for a long time.
  It seems that right outside of Chicago in Lake County, north of 
Chicago, is a great veterans hospital known as the North Chicago 
Veterans Hospital. It is modern. It serves thousands of veterans in the 
region. It was threatened with closure just a couple years ago, a few 
years ago now.
  Then, coincidentally, not far away, is the Great Lakes Naval Training 
Center, the training station for all of our new recruits in the U.S. 
Navy. There is a hospital in the center of the Great Lakes naval 
training base. It turned out that this hospital needed to be modernized 
because all of these recruits who once were trained in places such as 
California and Florida are now coming to the Great Lakes Naval Training 
Center off Lake Michigan.
  I talked with them about combining these two facilities. Can we bring 
together a Navy hospital and a veterans hospital, put them in one 
facility and coordinate their activities so they both have the very 
best?
  After years--literally years--of effort, it is going to happen. I 
thank Senator Carl Levin and so many others for making it a reality. 
This was a dream that many of us had, and it is on its way to 
completion.
  The amendment I have offered is one that will name this first-of-its-
kind medical facility in North Chicago the Captain James Lovell Federal 
Health Care Center. I think this is a fitting name for this facility.
  CAPT James Lovell was one of the first humans to travel in space. 
From his humble beginnings in Cleveland, OH, he loved flight. In 1944, 
a 16-year-old Lovell and his friends built a little rocket that shot up 
80 feet in the air and exploded. But it hooked him. He wanted to be a 
pilot.
  He went on to graduate from the U.S. Naval Academy in 1952 where he 
wrote his senior thesis on the feasibility of sending a rocket into 
space. He married his high school sweetheart, Marilyn Gerlach, the day 
he graduated. He went on to become a test pilot for the Navy. In 1962, 
NASA chose him as one of our first astronauts.
  He distinguished himself among his space flight colleagues, including 
Neil Armstrong, Buzz Aldrin, and John Glenn. He will be remembered for 
launching America into the new age of space. He had success as an 
astronaut, serving on the early Gemini 7 and Gemini 12 missions. In 
December 1968, he circled the Moon as a member of the Apollo 8 mission.
  Today, the iconic image of the Earth--a world of greens and blues 
hovering in the vastness of space--is a common sight. But in 1968, the 
Apollo 8 brought this image of Earth to the people of the world in a 
way never before seen, in Captain Lovell's own words, ``an oasis in the 
vastness of space.''

  Of all his accomplishments in space, Lovell is best known as the 
commander of the Apollo 13 mission. In 1970, Lovell and fellow 
astronauts, Fred Haise and John Swigert, launched what would become one 
of the most storied flights in NASA history.
  The Apollo 13 mission started as the third attempt at a lunar landing 
by a manned spacecraft. It ended, in the words of author W. David 
Compton, as ``a brilliant demonstration of the human spirit triumphing 
under almost unbearable stress.''
  The crew's mission started with little difficulty, but a few days 
into the flight, one of the fuel cells on the Apollo 13 short-
circuited, causing a fire that spread to the oxygen tanks.
  Lovell radioed back to mission control:

       Houston, we've had a problem.


[[Page S11326]]


  He knew that with the oxygen tanks and the fuel cells compromised, 
their lunar landing could not be completed.
  Apollo 13 had been on a lunar landing course. NASA made a risky 
decision. It set the spacecraft on a trajectory around the Moon. NASA 
engineers hoped the Moon's gravitational pull would whip Lovell and his 
colleagues back toward Earth with the speed they needed to return.
  For days the crew suffered from cold, a lack of oxygen, and little 
nourishment. The world turned its attention to the three American 
astronauts and to our government's effort to save them and bring them 
home.
  Seventy-two hours after Lovell and his crew had been in space, the 
Apollo 13 shot around the far side of the Moon and lost contact with 
mission control. But NASA's bet had paid off and the spacecraft headed 
home for a successful splash landing in the Pacific.
  With the safe return of Apollo 13, Captain Lovell became a great 
American hero and a great story in American history. He remained with 
NASA until he retired in 1973. During his 11 years as an astronaut, he 
spent more than 715 hours in space.
  Today, I am proud to say, he lives in my home State in Lake Forest, 
IL, just a few minutes from this new health care facility.
  The story of Apollo 13 has been told so many times as a testament to 
human ingenuity in harrowing circumstances. Captain Lovell's experience 
reminds us of our excitement in exploring the final frontier of space.
  With this amendment, which I hope the committee will accept, and I 
hope the Senate will accept, his name will embrace a new effort, not as 
glamourous and exciting as space travel, but an effort that honors his 
legacy, providing quality health care for Navy recruits, veterans, and 
military families.
  The second amendment which I have pending is one which will allow 
rural VA centers to be able to offer incentives for recruitment and 
retention of medical personnel. A little over 2 years ago, at the VA 
center in Marion, IL, we had a tragic situation where nine veterans 
lost their lives in surgery. We found later it was the result of 
mismanagement and medical malpractice. At that point, they closed down 
the surgical facilities in the Marion VA and started hiring new people 
to run the institution.
  I am sorry to tell you that it still is not where it needs to be. 
Progress has been made. A recent hygiene report has given us pause. We 
realize more has to be done. We still are finding there is a difficulty 
in attracting the kinds of medical professionals we need at this rural 
VA facility. This is not the only facility facing it. Many others have 
as well.
  What we are doing is taking existing funds in the VA and allowing 
them to dedicate a small portion to recruit and retain medical 
professionals. This is the least we can do to make sure we provide our 
veterans the very best.
  I ask unanimous consent that Senators Rockefeller and Tester be added 
as cosponsors of my amendment, which I believe is amendment No. 2760.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Webb). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, I have learned the hard way how important 
it is for rural veterans' hospitals to attract good doctors and 
administrators.
  The VA Medical Center in Marion, IL, has had significant problems 
with quality management and patient safety.
  In an effort to help improve quality at this rural medical center, I 
have spoken with two VA Secretaries, and one acting Secretary, about 
these challenges and potential responses. I have also corresponded with 
numerous VA officials, and met with the employees on the frontline of 
care at Marion.
  One thing I have taken away from all these conversations is how 
important it is to have the best possible providers and administrators 
in our veterans' medical facilities. And that is easier for Hines 
Medical Center in Chicago than it is for Marion and other rural health 
centers throughout this country.
  Many rural counties have the highest concentrations of veterans 
according to the 2000 census. The VA estimates that 37 percent of all 
veterans reside in rural areas.
  In 2007, we were horrified to learn that nine patients at Marion 
Veterans Affairs Medical Center had died in what turned out to be a 
terrible lapse in quality management and accountability.
  The hospital administrator, the chief surgeon, and others were 
relieved of their duties, and the hospital stopped offering in-patient 
surgeries.
  Since then, we have been told time and again, that the VA has 
addressed quality management structures there and has been trying to 
restart a full continuum of care at Marion.
  Last week, we found out that these efforts have not been enough. The 
VA's IG reported that patient safety and quality management at the 
Marion VAMC failed again on several measures.
  Many are repeats from what was found at Marion 2 years ago. It is 
clear that Marion VAMC leadership did not right the ship.
  Last week, members of the Illinois congressional delegation met with 
Secretary Shinseki about this most recent report on Marion.
  The Secretary talked about how important quality leadership is at the 
local level and how hard it is to recruit and retain talented, high-
performing administrators and doctors to rural facilities.
  This is not the first time we have heard this. In fact, the surgical 
program at the hospital has been shut down for two years because we 
don't have the personnel to restart it.
  Recruitment and retention of healthcare professionals to serve rural 
populations is a nationwide problem. It is not limited to the VA. And 
it is not limited to Illinois.
  In February, the Director of VA's Office of Rural Health testified 
that, ``greater travel distances and financial barriers to access can 
negatively impact care coordination for many rural veterans.''
  As far back as 2000, the VA recognized that the large proportion of 
rural veterans has made it harder for those veterans to access care.
  My amendment allows the VA to develop and test a pilot program to 
attract and retain high quality providers and management to rural 
facilities across the country. It is one of many efforts to address 
quality of care for our veterans.
  These incentives would only be available to the employee for as long 
as they were serving in the designated rural areas.
  The amendment would allow the VA to spend up to $1.5 million to 
attract qualified health care providers and another $1.5 million to 
attract qualified health care administrators to our neediest, most 
underserved rural VA facilities.
  The amendment would also require VA to report back to Congress on the 
structure of the program, the number of individuals recruited through 
such incentives, and the prospects for retention of these doctors, 
nurses, and administrators.
  Just last month, the Kansas Health Institute reported that financial 
incentives are an important part of recruiting and retaining providers 
to rural areas in the civilian sector.
  We need to give the VA similar tools.
  Veterans in Marion and Chicago, IL, New York City and Niagara, NY, 
Dallas and Temple, TX, deserve the same quality of care. As veterans of 
current wars leave active duty and return to their hometowns, we must 
be ready to serve them. It is simply the cost of war.
  This amendment would give the VA another tool to use as it works to 
improve its rural health facilities. I encourage my colleagues to 
support it.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Mr. President, along with my colleagues, Senators 
Thune and Webb, I am in strong support of the Frank Buckles World War I 
Memorial Act. This bill rededicates the site of the District of 
Columbia War Memorial on the National Mall as a National and DC World 
War I Memorial in recognition of the upcoming anniversaries of 
America's entry into World War I, and of the armistice that concluded 
World War I on November 11, 1918.
  The legislation is named in honor of Frank Buckles of West Virginia, 
the last surviving American World War I veteran. Mr. Buckles, born in 
1901 in Harrison County, MO, is a wonderful man and representative of 
his generation. At the age of 108, he resides in the

[[Page S11327]]

eastern panhandle of West Virginia, where he lives on his 330-acre farm 
with his daughter.
  His personal story is similar to many young men of his era. As an 
eager 16-year-old, Frank Buckles tried to enlist in the Army several 
times and finally succeeded. He then pestered his officers to be sent 
to France. Mr. Buckles drove motorcycles, cars, and ambulances in 
England and France, and during the Occupation, he guarded German 
prisoners. Following the war, he went to work for the White Star 
steamship line and was in Manila on business in December 1941 when the 
Japanese attacked the Philippines. Frank Buckles spent over 3 years as 
a prisoner at the city's Los Banes prison camp. On February 23, 1945, a 
unit from the 11th Airborne Division freed him and 2,147 other 
prisoners in a daring raid on the Los Banes prison camp. Mr. Buckles 
was affected by and has memories of both World War I and World War II.
  After his liberation from Los Banes, Frank Buckles returned to the 
United States. He married Audrey Mayo, a young lady whom he had known 
before the war, and in 1954 they settled down on the Gap View Farm in 
West Virginia. On this same farm, Mr. Buckles has remained mentally 
sharp and physically active. He worked on his farm with tractors up to 
the age of 105. Now, he reads from his vast book collection and enjoys 
the company of his daughter Susannah Flanagan who came to live with him 
after his wife passed away in 1999.
  I had the privilege of listening to Frank Buckles' compelling stories 
in his home in West Virginia while sitting with his daughter. He 
generously shares his memories of working to enlist and get to France, 
as well as meeting French soldiers and guarding German prisoners. 
Everyone can hear his reflections by visiting the Library of Congress's 
special Web site for its Veterans History Project. It has personal 
interviews of Mr. Buckles and thousands of other veterans that have 
served our Nation both during times of war and peace. Visiting this Web 
site is an incredible resource for scholars, students and every 
American, and it reminds us of the compelling personal stories of 
bravery, commitment, and sacrifice made by our country's veterans and 
how they shaped our world.
  The bill I introduced with Senators Webb and Thune is designed to 
honor and remember over 4.35 million Americans, like Frank Buckles, who 
answered the call of duty and served from 1914-1918 in World War I. 
What became known as the Great War claimed the lives of 126,000 
Americans, wounded 234,300, and left 4,526 as prisoners of war or 
missing in action.
  At the end of World War I, numerous cities and States erected local 
and state memorials to honor their citizens who answered the call and 
proudly served the United States of America. On Armistice Day in 1931, 
President Hoover dedicated the DC World War I Memorial to honor the 499 
District of Columbia residents who gave their lives in the service of 
our country. Since then, national monuments to commemorate the 
sacrifice and heroism of those who served in World War II, the Korean 
war, and the Vietnam war have all been built on the National Mall.
  Yet no national monument has yet been created to honor those who 
served in World War I. As our Nation prepares to celebrate the 
centennial of World War I, it is time for that to change by creating 
the National and DC World War I Memorial.
  Mr. President, I urge my colleagues in the Senate to cosponsor this 
legislation to rededicate the site of the District of Columbia War 
Memorial on the National Mall as a National and District of Columbia 
World War I Memorial.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Missouri.
  Mr. BOND. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to proceed as in 
morning guess.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                              Veterans Day

  Mr. BOND. Mr. President, tomorrow our Nation will honor the thousands 
of men and women who have answered the call to support and defend the 
Constitution of the United States of America against all enemies. Today 
I rise to pay tribute to these veterans and their commitment to the 
cause of freedom. These brave men and women are ones throughout ages 
who have made the contribution, who made the efforts, and some made the 
ultimate sacrifice to keep our country free. We owe them no less than 
our heartfelt thanks.
  In Kansas City, MO, we are very proud to have a facility called the 
Liberty Memorial which was set up many years ago as the only memorial 
to World War I veterans. That facility continues today to be a very 
proud part of the Kansas City heritage. We want to make sure that as we 
look back and honor the veterans of World War I, we recognize that this 
was the first, the best, and the most outstanding memorial to the 
veterans of World War I. I ask my colleagues to work with us as we 
appropriately recognize and elevate the Liberty Memorial to the status 
it deserves in honoring the men and women who served in that very 
difficult First World War.
  But also as we mark this Veterans Day, the massacre of 13 of our 
servicemembers at Fort Hood Texas is in all of our hearts.
  It is unthinkable that the brave men and women in our military, who 
already sacrifice so much when they go forward on the battlefield to 
fend off attacks, now find the attacks can come at home. But in the 
midst of this horrific tragedy, our Nation has also witnessed the 
courage, the heroism, and the quick thinking we have come to expect 
from our military personnel and law enforcement.
  There are many questions that need to be answered, and as vice 
chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee and also as the father of 
a marine and as an American, I want answers about how this could have 
happened and whether we could have prevented it. What do we learn from 
this? How do we take steps to make sure it doesn't happen again? I want 
to find out the who, what, when, where, if anything, our intelligence 
community knew and whether such information was shared with the 
appropriate action agencies.
  Whatever those answers turn out to be, we must ensure that our Nation 
remains vigilant against the threat of terrorism both from within and 
outside of the United States; that our law enforcement and intelligence 
agencies and our military have the tools and resources they need to 
defend and protect us here at home and abroad; and that their vigilance 
is never hampered by unreasonable restrictions on the use of those 
tools that end up aiding only the terrorists. In doing so, we will not 
only honor the memory of those men and women who died on this horrible 
day, in this unprovoked attack, but help save future men and women from 
such a fate.
  It is fitting that we honor our veterans and pause to recognize the 
hardships and sacrifices they have endured throughout wars, conflicts, 
and many difficult times. We remember especially those men and women 
who gave their lives so that others--whether comrades, families, total 
strangers, or the rest of us--could live in freedom. We owe these 
heroes and their families our eternal gratitude and respect.
  As a Senator from Missouri, I offer my very special thanks to the men 
and women in uniform and the men and women who have served in uniform 
from our State. In Missouri, the history of service is long and proud. 
My great State is home to Whiteman Air Force Base, Fort Leonard Wood, 
and many smaller Guard installations and bases. I am particularly proud 
of the work being done by the Missouri National Guard's Agricultural 
Development Team, currently in Afghanistan, where they are helping sow 
the seeds of peace and providing the security needed to ensure those 
seeds can grow.
  We owe these heroes in Missouri and across the Nation a debt too 
large ever to repay. At the same time, we recognize the many 
accomplishments and victories of our military forces. Since the 
September 11 attacks on our country, we have witnessed their bravery 
and determination as they fought al-Qaida and other terrorists head-on. 
Even when naysayers here in Washington were predicting certain defeat 
in Iraq, these men and women soldiered on and turned the tide toward 
victory.
  Turning to the battle we fight today, the battle in Afghanistan has 
been described by President Obama and many in this body as a war of 
necessity. The President has rightly said that we cannot retreat, we 
cannot fail, we cannot

[[Page S11328]]

be deterred from our efforts to counter the forces of evil in 
Afghanistan. But the voices who advocated cutting and running from 
Iraq, who predicted certain defeat, have been peddling the same 
pessimism with respect to Afghanistan.
  Seven months ago, I was very encouraged when President Obama outlined 
a strategy--a full-blown strategy--for achieving success in 
Afghanistan. I strongly supported this strategy, and particularly the 
appointment of GEN Stanley McChrystal to lead our troops on the ground. 
Yet here we are, on the eve of Veterans Day, and the latest indications 
from the President are troubling. Instead of a firm commitment to his 
own strategy, there is indecision. Instead of trusting the judgment of 
his own hand-selected commander on the ground, there are endless war 
councils and sessions with commanders who are not on the ground. 
Instead of one strategy, there are now five. Instead of certainty, 
there is only one possibility; that is, that a decision may be made by 
November 19. That is no way to run a war, at least not if we want to 
win the war. Dithering and wavering are not viewed with favor in any 
situation. When the lives of our men and women are on the line and the 
threat from al-Qaida and the Taliban grows stronger every day--as 
General McChrystal said, they are growing stronger--these delays are 
simply unacceptable. Yet the delays continue, threatening to undo the 
hard work by our military and intelligence professionals on the 
battlefields of Afghanistan.
  I have heard some congratulate the President for ``taking his time'' 
on such an important decision. As a father of a marine who served two 
tours of duty in Iraq, I agree that whenever we send Americans into 
battle to risk and possibly lose their lives, the decision must not be 
a hasty one. But it must not be unnecessarily delayed either. On the 
eve of Veterans Day, the gravity of this decision is even more moving.
  As I said earlier, the President has been advised by General 
McChrystal that every day we wait, the Taliban is gaining momentum. Our 
allies are wondering where we are going to come down. Our troops are 
wondering if they are going to be supported. The people of Afghanistan, 
who are and must be the target, are wondering if they are ever going to 
see the troops they need. That is why I applauded the President for 
making the firm decision on his war strategy in March of this year, 
months after campaigning on what he called a war ``fundamental'' to the 
defense of our people, months after he was sworn in as our Commander in 
Chief.
  As I said earlier, I also applauded President Obama for wisely 
choosing General McChrystal to implement his strategy for success in 
Afghanistan. The President was right to wait until hearing from his 
commander on the ground on what resources were needed before moving 
forward--an assessment that was delivered in July. Now we are hearing 
there are four other strategies, and what I want to know is: Who are 
the other four generals with responsibility for the troops on the 
ground, with responsibilities for their success, who are coming up with 
different strategies? We should learn one thing: When you are fighting 
a war, you need to listen to the commander whom you have selected and 
who is carrying out your strategy as you announced it. But now, as 
November goes by, months later, we are simply witnessing dangerous 
delay. Unfortunately, those in Washington whispering ``delay, delay, 
delay'' to the President are really whispering ``defeat.''
  I urge the President to ignore the pundits peddling pessimism in 
Washington. Instead, as we honor our veterans for their sacrifices 
today and in the past, I urge the President to honor our brave troops 
currently on the battlefield. Mr. President, honor the commander in 
chief you chose by giving him the resources needed to succeed in 
Afghanistan. Mr. President, please honor our warfighters in Afghanistan 
by recommitting to your own strategy, ending this indecision in 
Afghanistan, and giving our troops the support they need to succeed. 
That would be the most fitting tribute to our veterans of past, 
present, and future wars. I hope this opportunity will not pass.
  Mr. President, I thank the Chair, and I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.


                       Honoring Our Armed Forces

  Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I rise today to honor and pay tribute to 
Montana's fallen heroes, the dedicated men and women from our great 
State who have made the ultimate sacrifice in Iraq and Afghanistan 
since 9/11.
  Montanans proudly volunteer for military service at rates higher than 
any State in the country, higher per capita. Unfortunately, this 
distinction comes at a great price. To date, 40 Montanans have died and 
nearly 250 have been wounded in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan. Montana 
has now suffered more casualties per capita than any other State in the 
Union. This is staggering. It illuminates just how much our State's 
citizens have sacrificed in the service of our country.
  The famous World War II radio reporter Elmer Davis once said:

       This Nation will remain the land of the free only so long 
     as it is the home of the brave.

  It is painfully apparent that Montana is home to some of the bravest 
men and women of all. Who are these fallen heroes? They range in age 
from 18 to 40. They hailed from places far afield, such as Troy and 
Glendive, Billings and Missoula, Lame Deer and Colstrip. They grew up 
in cities and towns, on ranches and farms, and on the reservation. Some 
heroes were Active-Duty warriors, others part-time citizen soldiers. 
They held ranks from lance corporal to lieutenant colonel. It amazes me 
that with such a variety of backgrounds, our heroes all shared the 
common bond of a desire to serve their country in this time of crisis 
and need.
  The Gospel of John, chapter 15, reads:

       Greater love hath no man than this: that a man lay down his 
     life for his friends.

  No tribute could possibly express the extent of my gratitude for what 
these soldiers, sailors, airmen, and marines have done for their 
country.
  During Vietnam, the late Senator Mike Mansfield carried a casualty 
card in his breast pocket. In that same spirit, I, too, wish to honor 
their sacrifice by reading Montana's fallen heroes into the Record. The 
following Montanans were killed while serving in Operation Iraqi 
Freedom:

       Army SGT Travis M. Arndt, 23, Bozeman; Army SSG Travis 
     Atkins, 31, Bozeman; my nephew, Marine Cpl Phillip E. Baucus, 
     28, Wolf Creek; Army SSG Shane Becker, 35, Helena; Marine PFC 
     Andrew D. Bedard, 19, Missoula; Marine LCpl Nicholas William 
     Bloem, age 20, Belgrade; Army PFC Kyle Bohrnsen, 22, 
     Philipsburg; Army LTC Garnet Derby, 44, Missoula; Army SGT 
     Scott Dykman, 27, Helena; Army SPC Michael Frank, 36, Great 
     Falls; Marine LCpl Kane Michael Funk, age 20, Kalispell; Army 
     SSG Yance T. Gray, 26, from Ismay; Army SSG Aaron Holleyman, 
     26, Glasgow; Army PVT Timothy J. Hutton, 21, Dillon; Navy PO2 
     Charles Komppa, 35, Belgrade; Army CPL Troy Linden, age 22, 
     Billings; Army CPT Michael McKinnon, 30, Helena; Army SGT 
     James A. McHale, 31, Fairfield; Army MSG Robbie McNary, 42, 
     Lewistown; Marine LCpl Jeremy Scott Sandvick Monroe, 20, 
     Chinook; Army PFC Shawn Murphy, 24, Butte; Marine LCpl Nick 
     J. Palmer, 19, Great Falls; Army CPT Andrew R. Pearson, 32, 
     Billings; Marine Cpl Dean Pratt, 22, Stevensville; Army SPC 
     James Daniel Riekena, 22, Missoula; Army 1LT Edward M. Saltz, 
     27, Bigfork; Army PVT Daren Smith, 19, Helena; Marine Cpl 
     Raleigh C. Smith, 21, Troy; Marine Cpl Stewart S. Trejo, 25, 
     Whitefish; Army PFC Owen D. Witt, 20, Sand Springs; Army SPC 
     Donald M. Young, 19, Helena; Army PVT Matthew T. Zeimer, 18, 
     Glendive.

  The following Montanans were killed while serving in Operation 
Enduring Freedom:

       Navy aviation electronics technician, Andrew S. 
     Charpentier, 21, Great Falls; Army 1LT Joshua Hyland, 31, 
     Missoula; Marine Sgt Trevor Johnson, 23, Colstrip; Army SGT 
     Terry Lynch, 22, Shepherd; Army PFC Kristofer T. 
     Stonesifer, 28, Missoula.

  The following Montanans died shortly after returning home from 
Operation Iraqi Freedom: Army CPL Christopher M. Dana, 23, Helena; and 
Army SGT George Kellum, 23, Lame Deer.
  It pains me dearly to read this list out loud and I cannot begin to 
imagine how many broken hearts each name represents back home. Our 
fallen heroes fought and died for our great Nation and all it 
represents. We owe them a debt of gratitude that can never be fully 
repaid. We must honor their legacies by remembering their sacrifice as 
we carry on with our lives.
  To all of Montana's families staring at an empty bedroom or an empty 
chair at the dining room table: You will always be in my thoughts and 
prayers. I pledge to do all I can to honor your fallen loved ones.

[[Page S11329]]

  To Montana's fallen warriors: We will never forget.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent the order for the 
quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. SANDERS. I ask to speak as in morning business.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                              The Economy

  Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, I think, as most Americans understand, as 
a result of the greed, the recklessness, the illegal behavior of a 
relatively small number of financial institutions, the United States of 
America is currently in the midst of the worst economic and financial 
crisis since the Great Depression. Millions of Americans have lost 
their jobs. Millions of other Americans are working longer hours for 
lower wages. People have lost their homes, people have lost their 
savings, people have lost, in many respects, their hope.
  On Friday we learned that the official unemployment rate is now 10.2 
percent, the highest in over 26 years. But the official unemployment 
rate tells only half the story. If you add the number of people who are 
underemployed, if you add the number of people who have given up 
looking for work, what you find is we have 27 million people in that 
category of unemployed or underemployed, which is 17.5 percent of the 
American workforce. That is an astronomical number. Obviously there are 
areas of our country, in the Midwest and California, where the number 
is substantially higher than that.
  Over a year has come and gone since Congress passed the $700 billion 
bailout of Wall Street. In addition, of course, the Federal Reserve has 
committed trillions of dollars in zero interest loans and other 
assistance to large financial institutions. Added together, this 
amounts to the largest taxpayer bailout in the history of the world.
  President Bush, former Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson, and Fed 
Chairman Ben Bernanke told us we needed to bail out Wall Street because 
we could not allow huge financial institutions and insurance giants to 
fail. They said if any of these large institutions failed, it would 
lead to systemic damage to the financial system and, in fact, the 
entire economy.
  One might think, if these institutions then were too big to fail, it 
doesn't take a Ph.D. in economics to figure out maybe one of the 
important solutions would be to make them smaller. Too big to fail? 
Well, let's reduce their size.
  Yet in the last several years these financial institutions in many 
respects did not get smaller but, amazingly enough, they got larger. 
Too big to fail. What do we do? Make them larger. If that makes sense 
to somebody, it doesn't actually make sense to me, nor do I think to a 
majority of Americans.
  Last year the Bank of America, the largest commercial bank in this 
country, which received a $45 billion taxpayer bailout, purchased 
Countrywide, the largest mortgage lender in this country, and Merrill 
Lynch, the largest brokerage firm in the country. So you had a huge 
bank--too big to fail. They became larger through the consolidations of 
Countrywide and Merrill Lynch by the Bank of America.
  Last year JPMorgan Chase, which received a $25 billion bailout from 
the Treasury Department and a $29 billion bridge loan from the Federal 
Reserve, acquired Bear Stearns and Washington Mutual, the largest 
savings and loan in the country. Too big to fail? Well, what happens if 
you are JPMorgan Chase? You become bigger.
  Last year the Treasury Department provided an $18 billion tax break 
to Wells Fargo to purchase Wachovia, allowing that bank to control 11 
percent of all bank deposits in this country. Too big to fail? If you 
are Wells Fargo, make it bigger.
  Today these huge financial institutions have become so big that the 
issue now is not just too big to fail and taxpayer liability, the issue 
becomes concentration of ownership. According to the Washington Post, 
the four largest banks in the United States--that is the Bank of 
America, Wells Fargo, JPMorgan Chase, and Citigroup--now issue one out 
of every two mortgages. Half of the mortgages in America are issued by 
four large financial institutions. Two out of every three credit cards 
in this country are issued by the four largest financial institutions 
of the country. These same institutions hold $4 out of every $10 in 
bank deposits in the entire country.
  What we are looking at here is not just taxpayer liability for when 
huge financial institutions collapse and the taxpayers have to bail 
them out; now what we are also looking at is concentration of ownership 
where a handful--four major financial institutions--controls half of 
the mortgages, 2 out of 3 credit cards, and 40 percent of bank deposits 
in the entire country. That is wrong from a competitive point of view, 
from a point of view that the consumer has to have some choices and has 
to see some competition in order to get a break.
  The face value of over-the-counter derivatives at commercial banks 
has grown to $290 trillion--that is an astronomical sum of money--95 
percent of which is held in 5 financial institutions in the entire 
country. Five financial institutions control 95 percent of over-the-
counter derivatives. Derivatives are nothing more than side bets by 
Wall Street gamblers that oil prices will go up or down or that the 
subprime mortgage market will continue to get worse or betting on the 
weather or whatever else can make them a quick buck. Risky derivative 
schemes led to the $182 billion bailout of AIG, the collapse of Lehman 
Brothers, the downfall of Bear Stearns, and precipitated the largest 
bailout in the history of the world and the severe recession that 
millions and millions of people are experiencing today through their 
loss of jobs.
  If any of these financial institutions were to get into major trouble 
again, taxpayers one more time would be on the hook for another 
substantial bailout. In fact, the next time it might even be bigger 
than we saw last year. Now is the time to say clearly we cannot allow 
that to happen. Not only are too-big-to-fail financial institutions bad 
for taxpayers, the enormous concentration of ownership in the financial 
sector has led to higher bank fees. Every Member of the Senate has 
heard from constituents who pay their credit card bills on time every 
single month, they then bailed out Wall Street, and what they get in 
return is interest rates which have gone from 10 percent or 15 percent 
to 25 percent or 30 percent. That is what you get when four large 
financial institutions control two-thirds of the credit cards in this 
country.
  According to Businessweek, ``Bank of America sent letters notifying 
some responsible card holders that it would more than double their 
rates to as high as 28 percent.''
  That is what we are seeing all over this country. Credit card 
interest rates went up by an average of 20 percent in the first 6 
months of this year, even as banks' cost of lending declined. We all 
know this. Here are these guys on Wall Street. We bailed them out. They 
become bigger. And they say: Thank you, America. Now we are going to 
raise the interest rates on your credit cards to usurious rates--
outrageous, unacceptable. Twenty-five percent or thirty percent 
interest rates on hard-working people who pay their bills on time is 
something that should be eliminated and, in fact, on another issue we 
have legislation to do that.
  It seems to me if you add all of that together, the fact that the 
largest banks that were ``too big to fail'' have grown larger, that we 
have a very dangerous concentration of ownership within the financial 
institution industry, the time is now to do exactly what good 
Republicans, good Republicans such as Teddy Roosevelt and William 
Howard Taft, did 100 years ago; that is, to start breaking up those 
institutions.
  That is what we have got to do. We have got to start breaking up 
these institutions. Last week I introduced S. 2746, the Too Big to 
Fail, Too Big to Exist Act that would do that. I think the title of 
that legislation I have introduced says it all: If an institution is 
too big to fail, it is too big to exist. Let's break it up.
  This legislation is all of two pages long. It is not 2,000 pages like 
the

[[Page S11330]]

health care bill. It is two pages. That is all. It is very simple. This 
legislation would require the Secretary of Treasury to identify within 
90 days every single financial institution and insurance company in 
this country that is too big to fail. That should not be too hard to 
do. Which are the institutions that are too big to fail? Tell us who 
they are. Then within the rest of the year, within 1 year, start the 
process of breaking them up.
  One of the further reasons we have got to break up these institutions 
is not just that they continue to be a liability for taxpayers, not 
only that the concentration of ownership leads to higher and higher 
interest rates, leads to the fact that Wall Street remains an entity 
unto itself, largely a gambling casino which makes huge amounts of 
money for the people on Wall Street but ignores the credit needs of 
small and large businesses in the productive economy, but there is 
another reason. The other reason is I know some of my friends here say: 
Well, you know, we have got to regulate Wall Street. That is what we 
have to do, not break them up, regulate them. But it is not the 
Congress that is going to regulate Wall Street, it is Wall Street that 
is going to regulate the U.S. Congress.
  I think anybody who knows anything about politics knows that is true. 
We know that over a 10-year period, Wall Street has spent $5 billion on 
lobbying and campaign contributions. Despite their greed and the 
fiascos which they caused, what they are doing now is spending millions 
more trying to make sure that Congress allows them to go back to where 
they were.
  I don't think it is a question of us regulating them, it is them 
regulating us with so much wealth and so much power. That is what they 
are capable of doing. What we are beginning to see, not only in the 
United States but all over the world, are people saying: Enough is 
enough.
  I find it interesting that John S. Reed, who helped engineer the 
merger that created Citigroup, Inc., apologized for his role in 
building a company that has taken $45 billion in direct U.S. aid, and 
said ``banks that big should be divided into separate parts.''
  That is what John S. Reed said, the former CEO of CitiGroup. He was 
one of the people who engineered the deregulation effort. He has 
apologized to the American people, and I respect that very much; one of 
the few who has had the guts to come before the United States and say: 
I made a mistake. I am sorry. I respect him for doing that.
  Furthermore, we have Alan Greenspan, who probably more than any other 
person in this country led the effort to deregulate, to do away with 
Glass-Steagall, this philosophy that said: If we deregulate, if we 
allow these titans on Wall Street to do anything they want, they are 
going to create wealth for the whole economy.
  But even Alan Greenspan, whose disastrous leadership helped lead us 
to where we are right now, even he, I think, has recognized the error 
of his ways. According to Bloomberg News on October 15, 2009, former 
Chairman Greenspan said:

       If they're too big to fail, they're too big. In 1911 we 
     broke up Standard Oil--so what happened? The individual parts 
     became more valuable than the whole.

  That is Alan Greenspan understanding the errors he made.
  I should note, I am grateful Mr. Greenspan's views on the subject 
have drastically changed. Because when I was in the House, on the 
Financial Institutions Committee, he would come before that committee. 
He and I used to have a little bit of a debate on the issue of 
deregulation. I remember, back in 2000, I asked Mr. Greenspan the 
following question. I asked him:

       Aren't you concerned with such a growing concentration of 
     wealth that if one of these huge institutions fails that it 
     will have a horrendous impact on the national and global 
     economy?

  Here is what Mr. Greenspan said in the year 2000:

       No, I'm not. I believe that the general growth in large 
     institutions have occurred in the context of an underlying 
     structure of markets in which many of the larger risks are 
     dramatically--I should say fully--hedged.

  Well, unfortunately, Mr. Greenspan appeared to be wrong, was wrong, 
and we have spent $700 billion bailing out Wall Street and trillions 
more on low-interest loans. But it is not just Alan Greenspan who has 
changed his views. According to the Washington Post, we know this to be 
the case:

       The British government announced Tuesday it will break up 
     parts of major financial institutions bailed out by taxpayers 
     . . . The British government--spurred on by European 
     regulators--is forcing the Royal Bank of Scotland, Lloyds 
     Banking Group and Northern Rock to sell off parts of their 
     operations. The Europeans are calling for more and smaller 
     banks to increase competition and eliminate the threat posed 
     by banks so large that they must be rescued by taxpayers, no 
     matter how they conducted their business, in order to avoid 
     damaging the global financial system.

  In other words, what the United Kingdom is beginning to say is, we 
have got to start breaking up these institutions. If they are too big 
to fail, they are too big to exist.
  But it is not just Alan Greenspan, it is not just John Reed, former 
CEO of CitiGroup, it is Paul Volcker, the former Federal Reserve 
Chairman and the head of President Obama's Economic Recovery Advisory 
Board. This is what he said:

       Keep [banks] small, so that any failure won't have 
     systematic importance. People say I'm old fashioned and banks 
     can no longer be separated from nonbank activity. That 
     argument brought us to where we are today.

  Robert Reich, President Clinton's former Labor Secretary, has said 
that:

       No important public interest is served by allowing giant 
     banks to grow too big to fail . . . Wall Street giants should 
     be split up--and soon.

  That is Robert Reich.
  Sheila Bair, the head of the FDIC, has said that:

       We need to reduce our reliance on large financial 
     institutions and put an end to the idea that certain banks 
     are too big to fail.

  Simon Johnson, the former chief economist of the International 
Monetary Fund, the IMF, has said:

       Banks that are too big to fail must now be considered too 
     big to exist.

  I am under no illusions that taking on Wall Street will be an easy 
task. Generally speaking, Congress is never successful or very rarely 
successful taking on big money interests. They are too powerful, they 
have too much sway over this institution.
  As I mentioned earlier--this is quite incredible--the banking and 
insurance industry has spent over $5 billion on campaign contributions 
and lobbying activities over the past decade in support of 
deregulation, and they are spending even more today to try to prevent 
Congress from seriously regulating their industry.
  In 2007 alone--and if people want to know why the rich get richer and 
everybody else gets poorer, they should understand--the financial 
sector employed nearly 3,000 separate lobbyists to influence Federal 
policymaking. Remember, we only have 100 people in the Senate, 435 in 
the House. They have 3,000 separate lobbyists. So if anyone thinks it 
is going to be easy to reform the financial services sector, it clearly 
will not.
  But if we are going to turn this economy about, if we are going to 
try to prevent another disaster by which taxpayers have to bail out 
some of the wealthiest and most powerful people, if we are going to 
create a situation where financial institutions provide capital to the 
productive economy so that we can create decent paying jobs, producing 
real products and real services, we are going to have to finally stand 
up to these very powerful institutions.
  I think the issue is clear. I think all over this country people, 
whether they are progressive, whether they are conservative, understand 
that if an institution is too big to fail, it is too big to exist. 
Let's break them up.
  I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Nelson of Nebraska.) The Senator from New 
Jersey is recognized.


                Amendment No. 2741 to Amendment No. 2730

  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I understand there is a pending 
amendment before the Senate. I ask unanimous consent to set aside the 
pending amendment and call up amendment No. 2741.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The clerk will report.
  The bill clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from New Jersey [Mr. Menendez] proposes an 
     amendment numbered 2741 to amendment No. 2730.

  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the reading 
of the amendment be dispensed with.

[[Page S11331]]

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  The amendment is as follows:

  (Purpose: To provide, with an offset, an additional $4,000,000 for 
grants to assist States in establishing, expanding, or improving State 
                          veterans cemeteries)

       On page 52, after line 21, add the following:
       Sec. 229. (a) Additional Amount for State Veterans 
     Cemeteries.--The amount appropriated by this title under the 
     heading ``grants for construction of state veterans 
     cemeteries'' is hereby increased by $4,000,000.
       (b) Offset.--The amount appropriated or otherwise made 
     available by this title under the heading ``general operating 
     expenses'' is hereby decreased by $4,000,000.

  Mr. MENENDEZ. Mr. President, we are often reminded of the special 
sacrifice military families make in service to our country.
  Memorial Day and Veterans Day are just two occasions when we as 
Americans take a moment to acknowledge our military men and women, 
those who have served in uniform.
  We pause for a moment of silence. We bow our head for the fallen. 
Family members visit the final resting place of those they have lost.
  We think of those hallowed grounds, those special places, the lines 
of crosses at Normandy, the graves at Arlington, the tomb of the 
unknown soldier, veterans cemeteries across America, and we remember 
all those who have served this Nation with honor.
  One of the ways that we can honor them and their families is by 
covering the cost of burial for veterans, their spouses, and their 
dependent children in Federal veterans' cemeteries.
  Unfortunately, we have not adequately funded these cemeteries in the 
past and as the greatest generation ages, our ability to keep the 
promise of a free resting place for each of them is becoming 
increasingly difficult to keep.
  Across America and in my home State of New Jersey, Federal cemeteries 
are having problems keeping up with requests for burial. As these 
cemeteries become overcrowded, veterans and their families are turned 
away from a benefit they earned through their service. In fact, 10 
States do not even have Federal cemeteries, but have managed to set 
aside State cemeteries.
  The very least we can do is provide funding for these State veterans' 
cemeteries which would be a cost-effective way for the VA to provide 
veterans with the burial benefits they were promised.
  Veterans who have lived their whole lives in one place, a place with 
special meaning to them and to their families should have a final 
resting place based on the veterans cemetery in their location of 
choice, not the Veterans Administration's funding choice.
  My amendment would simply increase Federal funding for State 
cemeteries by $4 million so that we can have the resources to keep our 
promise and provide our heroes with the dignity, respect, and honor 
they deserve.
  Honoring America's veterans is not solely reserved for Memorial Day 
and Veterans Day.
  This commitment to State veterans' cemeteries reinforces America's 
respect for its veterans and their families. They have already given 
their service to this country; the least we can do is give them a final 
resting place with their brothers and sisters who served.
  Arlington cemetery is an inspiring place. We have all seen it. We 
have all been there. We are awed by its majesty and what it says about 
America, about who we are as a Nation, and what we stand for as a 
people.
  Let us give every State an Arlington to inspire the next generations 
to live up to the promise of America. We owe our veterans the choice to 
be buried with their families at a cemetery based on location and not 
economics.
  I urge my colleagues to support this important amendment.
  Mr. CONRAD. Mr. President, I rise to offer for the Record, the Budget 
Committee's official scoring of S. 1407, Military Construction and 
Veterans Affairs and Related Agencies Appropriations Act for fiscal 
year 2010.
  The bill, as reported by the Senate Committee on Appropriations, 
provides $78.1 billion in discretionary budget authority for fiscal 
year 2010, which will result in new outlays of $48.4 billion. When 
outlays from prior-year budget authority are taken into account, 
discretionary outlays for the bill will total $77.7 billion.
  An amendment has been adopted to designate $1.4 billion in budget 
authority in the bill as being for overseas deployment and other 
activities. Pursuant to section 401(c)(4) of the 2010 budget 
resolution, adjustments to the Appropriations Committee's section 
302(a) allocation and to the 2010 discretionary spending limits were 
made for that amount and for the outlays flowing therefrom.
  The bill matches the subcommittee's revised allocation for budget 
authority and for outlays.
  The bill is not subject to any budget points of order.
  I ask unanimous consent that the table displaying the Budget 
Committee scoring of the bill be printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

S. 1407, MILITARY CONSTRUCTION AND VETERANS AFFAIRS AND RELATED AGENCIES
                        APPROPRIATIONS ACT, 2010
[Spending comparisons--Senate-Reported Bill with Technical Amendment (in
                          millions of dollars)]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     General
                                          Defense    purpose     Total
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Senate-Reported Bill:
    Budget Authority...................     24,632     53,473     78,105
    Outlays............................     24,743     52,960     77,703
Senate 302(b) Allocation:---
    Budget Authority...................                           78,105
    Outlays............................                           77,703
House-Passed Bill:---
    Budget Authority...................     24,577     53,328     77,905
    Outlays............................     24,691     52,967     77,658
President's Request:---
    Budget Authority...................     24,351     53,315     77,666
    Outlays............................     24,643     52,219     76,862
Senate-reported bill with technical
 amendment compared to:
    Senate 302(b) allocation:---
        Budget Authority...............  .........  .........          0
        Outlays........................  .........  .........          0
    House-Passed Bill:---
        Budget Authority...............         55        145        200
        Outlays........................         52         -7         45
    President's Request:
        Budget Authority...............        281        158        439
        Outlays........................        100        741        841
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Note: The subcommittee's 302(b) allocation has been adjusted to reflect
  adoption of an amendment to designate $1.399 billion in budget
  authority as being for overseas deployments and other activities
  pursuant to Sec. 401(c)(4) of S. Con. Res. 13, the 2010 Budget
  Resolution.

  Mr. WEBB. Mr. President, the administration's fiscal year 2010 
defense budget request included authorization of an appropriation of 
$46.3 million for the dredging of the channel and turning basin at 
Naval Station Mayport, FL. The Deputy Secretary of Defense and the 
Secretary of the Navy confirmed that this dredging project is not 
associated with the Navy's proposal to homeport a nuclear-powered 
aircraft carrier, CVN, in Mayport. However, advocates for the Navy's 
homeporting proposal continue to assert that the dredging project is 
the ``first step'' in having a carrier homeported in Mayport. It is 
time to set the record straight.
  There is no cause-and-effect linkage between the Navy's homeporting 
proposal with the authorization and appropriation of fiscal year 2010 
military construction funds to dredge the channel at Mayport. The 
Navy's homeporting scheme is being reviewed separately as part of the 
Department of Defense's Quadrennial Defense Review. Dredging Mayport's 
channel will have no influence on its evaluation.
  Last April, when Secretary of Defense Gates announced key decisions 
associated with the President's fiscal year 2010 defense budget 
request, the Navy called me to confirm that its request for funds for 
dredging and pier improvement projects at Naval Station Mayport was not 
associated with its homeporting proposal. The Navy said its military 
requirement for dredging is to permit safer routine and emergency port 
visits by an aircraft carrier by lessening the current severe 
restrictions associated with the existing water depth in Mayport's 
channel and basin. The Navy acknowledged that the Quadrennial Defense 
Review would consider its carrier homeporting proposal separately.
  In August, Deputy Secretary of Defense Lynn wrote me to reconfirm 
this point. He said:

       Secretary Gates has taken the prudent step of seeking 
     funding for the dredging of the Mayport channel within the 
     fiscal year 2010 budget to provide an alternative port to 
     dock East Coast carriers in the event of a disaster. As you 
     know, the Secretary decided that the larger issue of whether 
     Mayport will be upgraded to enable it to serve as a homeport 
     for CVNs should be objectively evaluated during the 
     Department's Quadrennial

[[Page S11332]]

     Defense Review (QDR). We continue to believe that the QDR 
     will provide the best forum to asses the costs and benefits 
     associated with a strategic move of this scale.

  Also in August, the Secretary of the Navy, the Chief of Naval 
Operations, and the Commandant of the Marine Corps wrote the chairman 
of the Senate Committee on Armed Services regarding conference action 
on the Fiscal Year 2010 National Defense Authorization Act. Their 
letter specifically addressed the reasons why it was necessary to 
dredge Mayport's channel and basin. They stated the military 
construction project was necessary regardless of a final decision on 
aircraft carrier homeporting at Mayport.
  The three senior leaders of the sea services stated dredging was 
needed for the following reasons:

       Mayport is currently used as a transient dock for nuclear 
     aircraft carriers, and the current Mayport Channel and 
     turning basin depths impose undesirable restrictions on the 
     safe navigation of an aircraft carrier. Operational readiness 
     is degraded because a nuclear aircraft carrier cannot enter 
     the port with the embarked air wing and full stores and only 
     during certain high-tide conditions. It is prudent to remove 
     these operational limitations. The dredging provided in this 
     project is therefore required irrespective of the final 
     decision on aircraft carrier homeporting at Mayport.

  Conferees for the fiscal year 2010 defense authorization bill from 
the House of Representatives and Senate Armed Services Committees met 
in September and October to reconcile differences between each 
Chamber's bill. During their consideration of military construction 
projects, the conferees recognized that confusion could exist regarding 
the dredging project owing to the erroneous assertions that it would 
pave the way for homeporting a carrier in Mayport.
  As a result, a manager's statement accompanied the Fiscal Year 2010 
National Defense Authorization Act signed into law by President Obama 
last month. It states, in part, that the conferees authorized funding 
for the project based on assurances provided by the Secretary of the 
Navy and the Chief of Naval Operations that the dredging is needed for 
current operational considerations irrespective of a final decision on 
carrier homeporting at Mayport. Of note, the manager's statement says:

       The conferees emphasize that the inclusion of an 
     authorization for dredging at NS Mayport is not an indication 
     of conferee support for the establishment of an additional 
     homeport for nuclear aircraft carriers on the East Coast, or 
     intended to influence the ongoing Quadrennial Defense Review, 
     which may include a recommendation on the establishment of a 
     second East Coast homeport for nuclear aircraft carriers. 
     Furthermore, the conferees note that this funding is provided 
     solely to permit use of Mayport as a transient port, and that 
     any potential designation of Mayport as a nuclear carrier 
     homeport will require future authorizations from the 
     Committees on Armed Services of the Senate and House of 
     Representatives.

  Last year, the Navy said that the risk of a catastrophic event 
closing Hampton Roads is ``small.'' Dredging Mayport's channel and 
turning basin so that it can accommodate a nuclear-powered aircraft 
carrier for an unlikely emergency port visit clearly obviates the need 
to invest up to $1 billion to build duplicative nuclear-support 
infrastructure for carrier homeporting. During the Department of the 
Navy's budget testimony last June, Admiral Roughead, the Chief of Naval 
Operations, stated: ``Future shore readiness . . . is at risk.'' In 
fact, the Navy's shore readiness is at risk today. In January, the Navy 
acknowledged it had a $28 billion backlog in shore facility restoration 
and modernization.
  The need to sustain Naval Station Mayport is clear. Before investing 
what could be up to $1 billion to support a nuclear-powered aircraft 
carrier, however, the Navy should first properly maintain its existing 
shore facilities. As the Navy's own studies reveal, there are other 
more fiscally responsible and strategically sound homeporting options 
for Mayport, including the assignment of a large-deck amphibious ship 
or Littoral Combat Ship, LCS, surface combatants.
  I yield the floor.
  I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order 
for the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in 
morning business.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


                              The Economy

  Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, last week, we learned that the Nation's 
unemployment rate has risen to 10.2 percent. That is 1 out of every 10 
working Americans being out of a job. But the real number is even 
higher than that. It is really closer to 1 in 6 workers. When you add 
in people who are underemployed or have stopped looking for work, the 
unemployment number is almost 17 percent.
  According to a weekend article in the New York Times, that is the 
highest this country has seen in unemployment since 1982. The Times 
also noted: ``If statistics went back so far, the measure would almost 
certainly be at its highest level since the Great Depression''--the 
Great Depression 80 years ago.
  After all the bailouts and a $1 trillion stimulus bill, there are 
still 16 million of our constituents who want to work but are 
unemployed. In fact, despite the White House's fuzzy math, the real 
statistics show that the unemployment rate has more than doubled since 
the President signed the stimulus bill in February. And, you remember, 
that bill was supposed to be passed very quickly so the unemployment 
rate would not exceed 8 percent, and here we are today at 10.2 percent 
the way it is officially reported, but taking all the other people into 
consideration, 17 percent.
  So people kind of wonder why there is some question about all the 
debt we are piling on our future generations through the national debt. 
Particularly, it is a legitimate question when people were told the 
stimulus bill had to be passed ``right now'' or unemployment, then 
under 8 percent, might exceed 8 percent.
  So there are a lot of questions out there, and some of it carries 
over into the health care reform issues before Congress right now 
because it is kind of like people were not really concerned about 
health care legislation in the Congress of the United States even 
costing $1 trillion or more until they found out all these other 
trillions of dollars that were being spent to get us out of a recession 
were not working. Then it is kind of like the health care reform was 
kind of the straw that broke the camel's back to cause people to lose 
confidence in Congress using its own good judgment to solve this 
problem of the recession.
  So we have 10.2 percent unemployment officially, more otherwise. That 
equates to about 7 million lost jobs since the stimulus bill was 
passed, and despite the stimulus bill's failings, the White House is 
pinning its hopes on yet another trillion-dollar effort. Now they are 
using their ``back of the envelope'' calculations to say health care 
reform is going to save the economy. This picked up about 6 months ago, 
back in March, when the White House chose to focus on health care 
reform rather than the economic crisis.
  I would like to quote President Obama:

       Healthcare reform . . . is a fiscal imperative. If we want 
     to create jobs and rebuild our economy, then we must address 
     the crushing cost of healthcare this year, in this 
     administration.

  That is a quote from President Obama.
  I want to say, to some extent I agree with him. It is true health 
care costs are rising at twice the rate of inflation, straining family 
budgets, and making it difficult for American businesses to remain 
competitive. Congress should absolutely enact legislation that 
addresses these issues.
  But, unfortunately, the pending health care reform proposals in the 
House and Senate not only ignore the primary issue of cost, they also 
put in place policies that are going to cause more Americans to lose 
their jobs and further damage our struggling economy.
  So now to the main point of my coming to the floor to discuss this 
issue: Whether it is the $500 billion in tax increases or the growing 
list of Federal mandates in these pending health care reform bills, the 
pending bills will take our economy in the wrong direction, contrary to 
what the President said in

[[Page S11333]]

that speech several months ago when he said that if you want to fix the 
economy, you have to do something about health care reform. Maybe if 
the President had proposed his own bill, maybe he would have proposed 
something that did it, but what we see evolving in the Congress of the 
United States is not going to solve that problem.
  Back in March, again, when the President turned his attention to 
health care reform, the head of his Council of Economic Advisers, 
Christina Romer, said--and I have a chart that has the quote:

       We know that small businesses are the engine of growth in 
     the economy, and we absolutely want to do things to help 
     them.

  Well, I am not sure how the White House defines the word ``help,'' 
when it comes to getting small businesses back on track and turning the 
economy around, but I do know President Obama came up to Capitol Hill 
this past weekend to pressure House Members to vote for a bill that 
will have a devastating impact on small business in America. If this is 
what the administration means when they want to ``help'' small 
businesses, the old phrase, ``With friends like these, who needs 
enemies'' comes to mind.
  The President and Democratic leadership twisted arms and bought 
support for a bill that the National Federation of Independent 
Businesses--and that organization tends to be the voice of America's 
small businesspeople--actively opposed. After the bill passed, the 
National Federation of Independent Businesses released the following 
statement about the administration and Congress's efforts to help small 
business. This is a long quote, so let me read it, but we also have it 
on a chart here:

       Small business owners are outraged.

  Let me start over again. This is from the National Federation of 
Independent Businesses' comments on what happened in the House of 
Representatives:

       Small business owners are outraged. This bill will actually 
     make things worse, not better. With unemployment at a 26-year 
     high, the punitive employer mandates and atrocious new taxes 
     will force small business owners to eliminate jobs and freeze 
     expansion plans at a time when our Nation's economy needs 
     small business to thrive.

  It doesn't sound like the National Federation of Independent 
Businesses and the thousands of members they have throughout the United 
States appreciate the administration's efforts to help. With the 
marginal tax rate on some small businesses, especially those likely to 
expand, rising by 33 percent under the House bill, it is no wonder. 
Here we have a chart that says this. The green, present level of 
taxation; the red, how the President proposes to increase taxes to 39.6 
percent in his budget; and then we have other things that are still in 
the President's budget that are kind of hidden. I will not go into what 
PEPs and Peases are, but they are a hidden additional tax rate that 
brings it up almost another 2 percentage points to 41 percent. Then we 
have the last big bar that has everything in the previous two, plus the 
5.4-percent surtax that is in the House bill. It is these increased 
taxes on individuals--because a lot of small businesses file 
individually, they don't file corporate tax returns--that kills small 
business, the engine that creates 70 percent of the new jobs in 
America.
  So we have a situation with these potential tax increases, where any 
business looking to the capital markets will probably find sources of 
capital chilled by the 70-percent increase in marginal rates on capital 
gains that occurs under the House bill. We have this chart over here 
that shows when you add in the capital gains as well what happens. 
Because capital gains has a great deal to do with capital formation in 
America, and higher marginal tax rates tend to discourage that.
  Some Members might say the National Federation of Independent 
Businesses' statement was about the House bill, and it was, but bills 
we have before the Senate aren't much better. The HELP Committee bill 
has a similar pay-or-play mandate that will cost American jobs, as does 
the House bill. The Finance Committee bill is filled with tax increases 
that will directly affect small business owners and their employees, 
including families who make less than $250,000 a year, which would 
obviously be a violation of the President's campaign promise that he 
wasn't going to increase taxes for those earning under $250,000.
  So here we have another chart: Health care reform raises taxes on 
families with more than $75,000 in income. That is because $75,000 is 
below $250,000, so the President violates his campaign promise. Further 
analysis by the Congressional Budget Office has shown that small 
businesses could also face significantly higher health insurance 
premiums as a result of the new insurance market reforms. We have the 
consulting firm of Oliver Wyman concluding that the insurance reforms 
could raise premiums by as much as 20 percent. As more American 
businesses, big and small, face higher premiums and more taxes, workers 
will end up suffering.
  The Congressional Budget Office has concluded that pending Senate 
legislation could force about 3 million people out of their employer-
based coverage, and that doesn't even include the potential impact of a 
new entitlement program, a government-run program we call the public 
option.
  All of this doesn't sound like it is helping small businesses or 
letting people keep what they have, which was another Presidential 
promise. The bills also make our unemployment situation worse. We are 
talking about another $1 trillion in spending--$1 trillion we can't 
afford--that will end up costing Americans jobs.
  I wish to quote from a recent article jointly published by Health 
Affairs and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. We have that quote 
right here. I am going to quote a small part of that article:

       Small, lower-wage firms could be among the most affected--

  Meaning most affected by the pay-or-play mandate.

       Firms might respond by firing or declining to hire workers. 
     Several studies projected the loss of anywhere from 224,000 
     to 750,000 jobs.

  That analysis doesn't even take into account the impact of the tax 
increases and the new Federal mandates. The people who don't lose their 
jobs, of course, face lower wages because it doesn't matter whether you 
are an economist to the far right or an economist to the far left, 
there is agreement that as health insurance costs increase, wages go 
down.
  As all the new Federal mandates and the regulatory requirements drive 
up premiums, businesses will be forced to respond by lowering wages. 
All of this doesn't sound like a recipe for getting the economy back on 
track.
  I wish to review what the pending bills mean for the average worker 
and our struggling economy: higher unemployment, more than 750,000 jobs 
lost; increased health insurance premiums, maybe by as much as 70 
percent; lower wages, less money in your paycheck; $500 billion in 
higher taxes for individuals and businesses; more government spending 
and higher deficits.
  The administration and the Democratic leadership can make all the 
promises they want, but facts are the facts. Congress needs to address 
health care. We need to bring down costs, improve quality, and create a 
more competitive market for insurance, but we should do it in a way 
that makes our economy stronger. Unfortunately, the health care reform 
bills we have seen so far are bad for the economy and particularly bad 
for an American worker and particularly bad at a time when there is, at 
least officially, 10.2 percent of people unemployed and, if you take 
other factors into consideration as I have already spoken about, maybe 
around 17 percent unemployed. As the New York Times said, maybe the 
highest rate of unemployment going back to the Great Depression. This 
is bad.
  So I can only end by saying, as we look to the debate on health care 
reform and the analyses of these bills that are done by economists, 
done by advocates for small business, and the impact it is going to 
make on the economy, I think we ought to take a second look and not 
make this situation of the economy worse through a bill that ought to 
be helping the economy. Everybody agrees we may have the best medical 
care in the world. We don't have a perfect system, and that system 
needs to be changed, but in the process of doing it, we have to make 
sure we do not make a bad situation worse for our economy.
  Thank you. I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.

[[Page S11334]]

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. DeMINT. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Kaufman). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  Mr. DeMINT. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to temporarily set 
aside the pending amendment so I may call up two amendments.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.


      Amendments Nos. 2774 and 2779 to Amendment No. 2730, En Bloc

  Mr. DeMint. Mr. President, I wish to call up Inhofe amendment No. 
2774 and DeMint amendment No. 2779.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the amendments en bloc.
  The assistant legislative clerk read as follows:

       The Senator from South Carolina [Mr. DeMint], for Mr. 
     Inhofe, for himself, and Mr. Barrasso, Mr. Brownback, Mr. 
     Crapo, Mr. DeMint, Mr. Enzi, Mr. Johanns, Mr. Kyl, Mr. 
     Roberts, Mr. Thune, Mr. Vitter, Mr. Bond, and Mr. Hatch, 
     proposes an amendment numbered 2774 to amendment No. 2730.
       The Senator from South Carolina [Mr. DeMint] proposes an 
     amendment No. 2779 to amendment No. 2730.

  The amendments are as follows:


                           amendment no. 2774

 (Purpose: To prohibit the use of funds appropriated or otherwise made 
 available by this Act to construct or modify a facility in the United 
   States or its territories to permanently or temporarily hold any 
                individual held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba)

       On page 60, after line 24, add the following:
       Sec. 608. (a) None of the funds appropriated or otherwise 
     made available by this Act may be used to construct or modify 
     a facility or facilities in the United States or its 
     territories to permanently or temporarily hold any individual 
     who was detained as of October 1, 2009, at Naval Station, 
     Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
       (b) In this section, the term ``United States'' means the 
     several States and the District of Columbia.


                           amendment no. 2779

(Purpose: To prohibit the use of funds for the transfer or detention in 
 the United States of detainees at Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, 
if certain veterans programs for fiscal year 2010 are not fully funded)

       At the end of title II, add the following:
       Sec. 229. (a) Limitation on Use of Funds for Transfer or 
     Detention in United States of Detainees at Guantanamo Bay 
     Without Full Funding of Certain Veterans Programs.--
       (1) Limitation.--None of the funds appropriated or 
     otherwise made available by this Act may be used to support, 
     prepare for, or otherwise facilitate the transfer to or the 
     detention in any State or territory of the United States of 
     any individual who was detained as of November 1, 2009, at 
     Naval Station Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, until 15 days after the 
     Secretary of Veterans Affairs certifies to Congress that the 
     programs specified in subsection (b) are fully funded for 
     fiscal year 2010.
       (2) Certification.--The certification submitted under this 
     subsection shall include a description of the funding 
     available for fiscal year 2010 for each program intended to 
     address a need of veterans specified in subsection (b).
       (b) Programs.--The programs specified in this subsection 
     are the programs of the Department of Veterans Affairs to 
     meet needs of veterans for the following:
       (1) Health care.
       (2) Rehabilitation and reintegration into the community of 
     veterans suffering from traumatic brain injury (TBI).
       (3) Rehabilitation and reintegration into the community of 
     veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder 
     (PTSD).
       (4) Specially adapted housing for disabled veterans.
       (5) Counseling and treatment for service-connected trauma, 
     including trauma associated with sexual assault.

  Mr. DeMINT. Mr. President, I yield the floor, and I suggest the 
absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. REID. I ask unanimous consent that the order for the quorum call 
be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Shaheen). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.

                          ____________________