[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 85 (Tuesday, June 8, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4629-S4630]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
GULF OILSPILL
Mr. REID. Madam President, I had the good fortune of having been put
on the Environment and Public Works Committee from the first day I came
to the Senate. It has been a great experience to serve on that
committee. I have served under Chairman Chafee, Chairman Moynihan, and
Chairman Baucus. Some remember I gave up my chairmanship for Jim
Jeffords from Vermont. The committee is terrific. I love the
jurisdictional swing that committee has.
As a result of this background, I have watched the oilspill in the
gulf very closely. But I say to everyone within the sound of my voice,
you do not have to have longstanding experience on the Environment and
Public Works Committee to understand how terrible this has been to the
environment. We do not know the outcome of the degradation to our
environment as a result of this tragedy, and that is what it is. The
Coast Guard admiral who is in charge has indicated there is no longer a
plume. There is oil going in different places. Remember, the oil well
is a mile below the surface of the ocean. So there are tar balls,
sheets of oil for hundreds and hundreds of miles. Sadly, the worst is
probably yet to come.
The one thing we tend not to focus on very much is the loss of life.
Of course, we see the dead animals, and that is tragic. It is so sad. A
pelican is an animal. It is not on the endangered species list. We took
it off that list in the last year or so. Now these animals are dying by
the dozens every day.
What we do not focus on as a result of the negligence--gross
negligence--
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perhaps criminal acts of BP is that 11 people are dead; 11 people were
killed. That seems to be overshadowed a lot of times. Eleven people are
dead. Brothers, fathers, and sons were killed on the night of that
terrific explosion. I hope we do not, in spite of the horrible
conditions that have been caused to our environment, lose track of the
fact that this is a personal tragedy for lots of people. Eleven people
were killed and many others were injured. The American people are going
to have to not forget the personal tragedies of these people who were
lost. I am sure they will not.
I thought it important this morning to remind everyone that this is
certainly an environmental disaster. But for the persons involved as a
result of the cutting of corners that BP did--it is not just me
talking. We see it on TV shows and the evidence is coming in. I talked
with one oil executive over the weekend, and he is flabbergasted. He is
flabbergasted as to what had taken place. There was no redundancy. This
company simply did not follow rules that are in place to prevent things
like this from happening.
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