[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 50 (Monday, April 12, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S2185-S2186]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
HEALTH CARE REFORM
Mr. REID. Mr. President, last December, just minutes before the
Senate passed the health care reform bill that President Obama signed
into law last month, my friend, the Republican leader, predicted we
would get an earful when we got home, and he was right. Everywhere I
went in Nevada, from the two big cities of Reno and Las Vegas, to Elko
and Carson City and my hometown of Searchlight, Nevadans, young and
old--people, in general--came up to me and said: Thank you--numerous
people, without any exaggeration.
One mother told me how grateful she was she could finally cover her
child's health care. Her child has juvenile diabetes. Parents such as
she told me how grateful they were that they would be able to keep
their kids on their insurance until they are 26 years old. Out-of-work
Nevadans--and there is more than one I would like to acknowledge--
explained to me how grateful they were that finally they will be able
to afford their own health care while they try to find a full-time job.
Seniors, individually and in groups, told me how grateful they are
now that they will not have to worry about whether they are going to
have to split a pill or take a pill because the doughnut hole has been
filled. Everyone--every senior citizen in America, every Social
Security recipient--understands what the doughnut hole was and isn't
anymore.
Many small businesses told me that because of the tax cuts this
Congress passed and our President signed into law because of the health
care bill this year, they will be able to afford health insurance for
the first time in their lives for their employees--24,000 of those
small businesses in Nevada.
These people haven't been fooled by the opposition's strategy of
myths and misinformation. They aren't frightened by the campaign of
fear and false cries of socialism.
I know I am not the only one who got an earful of thanks from
constituents whose lives are changing for the better because of this
historic reform. I also heard one other thing everywhere I went: This
law should not be repealed.
A week ago this Sunday, I returned from Salt Lake City to Las Vegas,
and the front page of the Salt Lake Tribune had a story, which I will
paraphrase, but basically it said that those people in Utah are no
longer talking about repealing the bill; they are talking about trying
to improve the bill.
It is hard for people to talk about repealing this bill which gives
such immediate benefits to the American people. It is difficult to try
to have someone say I would like this bill repealed because I do not
agree with the $1.3 trillion by which this legislation is going to
reduce the debt of this country in the second 10 years--$142 billion in
the first 10 years.
I explained to people at home, if you have a fight in a ring, you
have a referee, a referee there to be as fair as they can to make sure
it is a fair fight. In this health care debate, we had such an entity
in the ring with us as we battled, Democrats and Republicans. It was
set up many years ago, this referee; it was called the Congressional
Budget Office. It is not run by Republicans or Democrats. It is there
to be fair. It is their determination this legislation over the first
10 years would save $142 billion, the second 10 years would reduce the
debt by a further $1.3 trillion.
People all over America, and Nevadans, now have more control than
ever over their health, more protection from insurance companies, and
more opportunity than ever before to have a healthy life.
As it relates to the economy, Nevadans know that health reform is
economic reform. It will save families money in the short run and save
our country money in the long run. But they also know we have to do
more. We have to make more investments today to help our economy run
better tomorrow. One of the best ways to do that is by creating green
jobs, and that has worked so well, jobs right here at home that can
never be outsourced, jobs that strengthen our Nation's economic,
environmental and national safety and security.
Boulder City is a city in Nevada. It was built because of the Boulder
Dam, now Hoover Dam. It is a great and beautiful little city. It is the
only city in Nevada that has a growth ordinance. But they have also
been very farsighted. I extend my appreciation to Mayor Tobler and all
the city council. They have set up a zone where they are creating green
jobs, and lots of green jobs. I went there. It is between Railroad Pass
and Searchlight and part of it is Boulder City. It was amazing what we
saw there. For acre after acre, workers, men and women in their hard
hats and their orange vests, were placing 1 million solar panels in
place--1 million in the desert to produce enough electricity for about
45,000 homes. It is
[[Page S2186]]
the largest plant of its type in the world. There may be one in Spain
that may be a tiny bit bigger, but let's assume it is not. It is a huge
plant. We have this going on all over Nevada as a result of the
economic recovery package and tax incentives we give people to build
green energy--clean energy jobs. That vast array in the middle of the
desert, dotted by countless hard hats worn by people working very hard,
was truly an impressive sight.
This afternoon at 5:30 we are going on to something extremely
important, especially for people who have been struggling in America.
We need to continue supporting projects such as, of course, the solar
plant in Boulder City and continue moving toward a clean energy
economy. They demand critical long-term investments and we have a long
way to go. But there are additional things we can do right now this
afternoon at 5:30 to help millions of hard-working Nevadans and
Americans struggling to find work. These are not deadbeats; these are
not bums; these are people who are out of work and have been out of
work for a long time and have struggled to find a job. If we pass this
emergency extension of unemployment and health benefits, we can give
those unemployed families the help they need to put food on the table
or go to the doctor.
Some on the other side flatly refuse to do so. To them it doesn't
matter that these people lost their jobs through no fault of their own
or that they are desperate to find a new full-time job and that this is
an emergency, not only for our families but for our country. Many of
those who oppose this extension voted to give tax breaks to rich chief
executive officers who shipped American jobs overseas. Now that their
constituents are trying to find jobs of their own, I hope they will
consider giving them at least the short-term help they need and need
critically. If Republicans continue blocking unemployment assistance, 1
million Americans will lose that lifeline by the end of this month.
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