[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 7 (Thursday, January 21, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S71-S72]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HAITIAN ADOPTIONS
Ms. LANDRIEU. I thank my colleague from Illinois for his passionate
and coherent and convincing arguments about the issue of how to detain
terrorists and knowing that we can do that very well in the United
States, and also his explanations about the financial situation and
some of the things the President is doing to correct that situation.
But I came to the floor this morning in morning business to talk
about a different subject, and one that is quite troubling to Americans
as we watch the unfolding horror in Haiti. As we stand ready and
willing to do everything we can, not only as leaders in the Senate and
Congress, our constituents are leaning forward wanting in every corner
of this country to do everything they can to help.
It is very frustrating to see, again, some of the similar, almost
eerily similar scenes from having lived through Katrina and Rita,
Gustav, and Ike along the gulf coast. Whether those scenes were from
New Orleans, as we remember, or Plaquemines Parish or St. Bernard or
Galveston or Gulfport or Biloxi, those scenes are still quite fresh in
the minds of Americans.
I think people are thinking the same way I am, which is, when will we
ever get this right? We know sometimes things happen that are
unpredictable, but this is not one of those cases either. Just like
some parts of the Katrina disaster were quite known and predictable,
this too, and that is a story for another day.
But as we struggle through this situation, I want to thank the
administration, not only ours but administrations around the world, for
what they are trying to do, and say I know we can do better and
everybody watching this knows we can do better and one day we will. We
are going to do what we can as quickly as we can. I am going to stay
focused, with many of my colleagues here, on one aspect of this
response and recovery; that is, the aspect of children and particularly
orphan children.
I have been very proud to be the leader of the coalition in this
Congress of over 220 Members. We are completely united and completely
nonpartisan in our advocacy for orphans in America and around the
world. This is a moment where I would like to spend, although my time
is short, saying this is a good time for us as a country and as Members
of Congress to try to understand the magnitude of the challenge before
us.
Let me begin, before I go into the situation, to personally and by
name thank the Members of the Senate who have stepped up to date
quickly and forcefully to join this effort. Your name, Madam President,
is at the top of the list, the junior Senator from New York. We thank
you for your extraordinary leadership. I also thank the Senator from
Colorado, Mark Udall; the Senator from Massachusetts, John Kerry; the
Senator from Michigan, Carl Levin; Chris Bond from Missouri; Arlen
Specter from Pennsylvania; Bob Casey from Pennsylvania; Herb Kohl from
Wisconsin; Mark Warner from Virginia; Senator Barrasso; Senator
Johnson; Senator Bennett; Senator Stabenow; Senator Bill Nelson from
Florida; Senator Lautenberg; Senator Thune; Senator McCain; Senator
Menendez; and Senator Hutchison; and my cochair in all of this,
obviously, Senator Inhofe.
We are a bipartisan group. Our numbers are growing every day, numbers
of Senators who say we want to focus on the welfare of children and
particularly orphans and come up with a better plan to respond to this
humanitarian disaster as it relates to them. We are committed to the
fundamental--almost a concept that I do not know how anyone could
argue, but people do, that all of us understand that children actually
belong in families. I know this is a difficult concept for some people
in our country and the international community to grasp. But children
do not do
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well alone. Children do not do well in orphanages, no matter how well
they are run. Children do not want to grow up in group homes of which
we have thousands of children in our own country in group homes.
Actually, children want to grow up in families. This may be a
startling concept for some but not for us. That is why we advocate for
child welfare policies that at its beginning, middle, and end advocate
the basic fundamental truth that children are best raised in a family
with one responsible parent if not two. We do not think there should be
any argument about that. So we are puzzled as to why we have so many
difficulties sometimes explaining that in situations like Haiti or in
America or in places in Africa or Central America around the world.
There are so many barriers to adoption. It breaks our hearts. It just
breaks our heart. One barrier after another.
We think this is quite simple. We think these barriers have to come
down, and we are determined to pull this out.
I want to give some numbers to you that will be startling to you
because they are to me.
In America we have 320 million people approximately. We have 100,000
orphans. There are a lot of orphans in our own country. They are
invisible to people. We try to bring their pictures to the Senate floor
sometimes and tell people there are 100,000 magnificent children of all
races, shapes, and sizes who are in need of a family right here at
home. We do our best to promote domestic adoptions and have been doing
a much better job.
Americans adopt about 120,000 children a year, mostly from our foster
care system, some infant adoptions in America, and, happily, 20,000
international adoptions. But when you hear this number, you would fall
down if you were not sitting down. Haiti has 9 million people.
Remember, we have 320 million, they have 9 million. They had 380,000
orphans before the earthquake struck.
I am going to repeat that. They have 9 million people. They had
380,000 orphans before the earthquake struck. We cannot begin to
estimate how many orphans there are today, but I promise you that
number has at least doubled.
Now, I am not going to be part of a system that says, with those
numbers and that truth, our job is to find those children, dust them
off, fix their broken limbs, heal them physically, try to help them
emotionally, and then stick them in orphanages for the rest of their
lives. I am not going to support that. I am hoping the Members on this
side will not support that either.
That is what we have had for the last 50 and 100 years in terms of
policy all around the world, even in Haiti. We cannot have that
anymore. The international treaty that we have all been a part of
trying to help says this: It says every child should stay in the family
to which they were born with the parents who brought them into the
world. When they are separated from those parents, through death or
disease or famine or war, they are then to be placed, as quickly as
possible, with a relative who is willing and able to raise them.
If I passed away, the Presiding Officer knows my sisters or one of my
brothers would step in. If my husband and I died, my sisters and
brothers would step in to raise our children. That is normally what is
done all over the world. It is no surprise. But when there is no family
member to take in a child, then the treaty says you shall find a home
for that child somewhere in their country, in their community, which
makes sense. Culturally, that makes sense.
While I am a big believer in cross-cultural adoption and biracial
adoption--I am a huge supporter of that--but I understand we want to
try to place children as close to their initial beginnings as possible.
When that becomes impossible, it is our job to find them a home
somewhere else in the human family because, after all, we are one human
family. If anybody would like to come to the Senate floor to disagree
with me, I look forward to debating that with them. I do not think I
will find any arguments here among Senators, from the very conservative
to the most liberal. It is just a basic moral tenet that we are one
human family. So it makes me so angry when I see governments, sometimes
even our own, sometimes even our own bureaucracy, sometimes even our
own embassy fighting that concept. They throw up their hands and say:
We just cannot. It is overwhelming. We cannot find a way to do it.
Every excuse in the world to keep these children from the one thing
they need most, which is a parent, someone to love them.
If anyone thinks that just feeding children and clothing children is
what God is calling us to do, I would beg to differ. Yes, we have to
keep them alive. Yes, we have to give them care. But what most
importantly little human beings need are bigger human beings to raise
them. If they do not get that, they end up not growing up in a strong
way. They end up in our prison systems. They end up in homes. They end
up sick. Not that every child that is in a family in America, even with
the most loving parents ends up always wonderfully, but they most
certainly have a better opportunity.
So I am just putting a line in the sand here and saying to my
colleagues that I am proud of the 40 Members of Congress, House and
Senate Members, who sent a letter to Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton, who all of her life has been a leader on this subject. We are
so grateful she is there as Secretary of State. We sent this letter to
Secretary Napolitano. I am going to put this letter in the Record.
I am pleased the letter we just sent 3 days ago has already been
responded to. The Departments have issued humanitarian parole for the
orphans who were in the process of being adopted, and there were a
couple hundred. Parents here have been desperate. They have already
been matched with their children. They have pictures of their children.
They were in the process of adopting those children. You can imagine
how desperate they are. That process is underway.
We are going to continue to press to make sure that not just the
green light was held up, but that our government at every level, from
Defense to Homeland Security to Transportation, is doing everything
they can to execute the swift and safe removal of these children in
Haiti to American families who will nurture them and support them.
Then the next step--I see my colleague from Utah here--I am going to
end in just a moment. The next step will be to work with a broad
coalition of faith-based communities in our country and around the
world, with private sector corporations, large and small, with
individual Americans who want to contribute and be a part of this
effort.
I intend to lead and set up a framework so that thousands and
thousands, hundreds of thousands of orphans in Haiti can find the
family to which they were born. We are going to try very hard. If not,
a relative in Haiti, if not someplace in Haiti for them to live in the
joy and comfort of a supporting and loving family, and then if not
here, then somewhere in the world where these hundreds of thousands of
orphans--and I hope not to say this, but potentially 1 million; but
let's hope that number does not ever reach this--find families.
This is not going to happen in the next 24 hours or 48 hours. But
with our concerted help and vision and leadership, it can happen not
just in Haiti but around the world, including right here in the United
States of America.
So I want to thank my colleague, Jim Inhofe, who is the cochair of
the Adoption Caucus. I want to thank the Members of the Senate and the
House, particularly Jim Cooper, Michele Bachmann, and others who have
stepped up so quickly.
We will be speaking on this floor quite a few times in the future as
we get updates about this issue. I thank Americans for the outpouring
of support for children in Haiti, for all people of Haiti, but
particularly the children and particularly the orphans who need our
help.
I yield the floor.
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