[Congressional Record Volume 156, Number 89 (Tuesday, June 15, 2010)]
[Senate]
[Pages S4914-S4928]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
AMERICAN JOBS AND CLOSING TAX LOOPHOLES ACT OF 2010
Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, what is the pending business?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will report the pending business.
The legislative clerk read as follows:
Motion to concur in the House amendment to the Senate
amendment to H.R. 4213, an act to amend the Internal Revenue
Code of 1986 to extend certain expiring provisions, and for
other purposes.
Pending:
Baucus motion to concur in the amendment of the House to
the amendment of the Senate to the bill, with Baucus
amendment No. 4301 (to the amendment of the House to the
amendment of the Senate to the bill), in the nature of a
substitute.
Franken amendment No. 4311 (to amendment No. 4301), to
establish the Office of the Homeowner Advocate for purposes
of addressing problems with the Home Affordable Modification
Program.
Sanders amendment No. 4318 (to amendment No. 4301), to
amend the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to eliminate big oil
and gas company tax loopholes and to use the resulting
increase in revenues to reduce the deficit and to invest in
energy efficiency and conservation.
Vitter amendment No. 4312 (to amendment No. 4301), to
ensure that any new revenues to the Oil Spill Liability Trust
Fund will be used for the purposes of the fund and not used
as a budget gimmick to offset deficit spending.
Reid amendment No. 4344 (to amendment No. 4301), to amend
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986 to extend the time for
closing on a principal residence eligible for the first-time
home buyer credit.
Thune/McConnell amendment No. 4333 (to amendment No. 4301),
of a perfecting nature.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, George Santayana wrote:
Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat
it.
Today, we must remember the past. We must learn from past mistakes,
and we must do our best to avoid repeating them.
In its response to the Great Depression of the 1930s, the Federal
Government made a serious mistake. It is important to remember this
past so we are not condemned to repeat it. The stock market crashed in
1929. By 1933, the unemployment rate reached a high of 25 percent. A
few years later--4 years later, to be precise--in 1937, the economy was
rebounding. The unemployment rate had fallen to 14 percent, gross
domestic product was growing at an average rate, if you can believe it,
of 9 percent a year, and the stock market had more than doubled over
the past 4 years. That was 1937. The economy was on the road to
recovery. But this exceptional economic growth did not just happen. It
resulted from strong actions by the Federal Government. From 1933 to
1937, for example, the United States dramatically increased the money
supply. Lower interest rates and greater credit availability helped to
stimulate spending and economic growth. New Deal programs also helped.
Spending was modest but significant compared to the magnitude of the
Great Depression. But the response provided a notable boost to the
economy, and it helped instill confidence in the Federal Government's
ability to tackle the Depression.
But in 1937, after 4 years of growth, the government made a mistake.
Concerned about short-term deficits, what did it do? It began to cut
spending and it began to raise taxes. A bonus for World War I veterans,
which provided a boost in consumer spending, was allowed to expire in
1937. Social security taxes were collected for the first time in 1937.
And marginal tax rates increased dramatically. What happened? This
premature attempt to reduce deficits pushed the economy back over the
edge. It was premature. The jobless rate shot back up to 19 percent. In
1938, gross domestic product fell by 3 percent. Shortsighted policy
decisions
[[Page S4915]]
caused a double-dip. The mistaken desire to balance the budget too
quickly effectively lengthened the Great Depression by 2 more years.
I understand the desire today to reduce deficits. I share that
desire. We do need to put in place deficit reduction that will take
effect after the recovery has kicked in. But we must also learn from
the 1937 history. We must not repeat the mistake that led to the
double-dip downturn of the late 1930s. If we were to dramatically cut
spending or increase taxes to reduce the deficit in the short run, it
would run the risk of causing a double-dip in this great recession.
Today, the economy remains too fragile to begin cutting back.
Unemployment stands at 9.7 percent. The May jobs report was
disappointing. The private sector created only 41,000 new jobs. In
total, 15 million Americans still remain out of work, and half those
unemployed have been unemployed for more than 6 months. Gross domestic
product grew 3 percent in the first quarter of 2010, but this was down
from 5.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2009.
Just as in 1937, we are in a recovery period. That is true. And just
as in 1937, it is a recovery that is showing signs of weakness. If we
act recklessly today, we risk a double-dip recession. If we adopt a
constrictive fiscal policy in the short run, we risk prolonging the
great recession for years to come. We cannot act without regard to the
consequences of our actions.
Make no mistake, we must tackle and should tackle our long-term
deficits. That is clear. And that is why one of the goals of the
President's Commission on Fiscal Responsibility and Reform is to
``achieve fiscal sustainability over the long run.'' We do need to act
aggressively to reduce our long-term deficits as the economy enters a
phase of expansion. But first we must pull ourselves out of this great
recession.
One of the best things we can do to facilitate the delicate recovery
is to pass the American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act before us
today. This bill extends tax cuts for families and businesses that will
help them in these difficult times, and this bill sustains vital social
safety net programs that will also help foster economic growth.
We have made the mistake of cutting back too soon once before, and we
must not make it again. The Thune amendment, which will be before us in
the not to distant future this week, will move in the wrong direction.
Instead of helping to create economic demand, the Thune amendment would
curtail aggregate demand by more than $50 billion. Instead of
continuing the good the Recovery Act has done, the Thune amendment
would chop it off.
The Thune amendment would, among other things, cancel unspent and
unallocated mandatory spending in the Recovery Act--stop it. That
spending is working. The Recovery Act is working. The Federal Reserve
and many independent economists have credited the Recovery Act with
playing an important role in stabilizing the economy.
This is what the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office said in its
most recent report:
CBO estimates that in the first quarter of calendar year
2010, [the Recovery Act's] policies raised the level of real
. . . gross domestic product . . . by between 1.7 percent and
4.2 percent, lowered the unemployment rate by between 0.7
percentage points and 1.5 percentage points, increased the
number of people employed by between 1.2 million and 2.8
million, and increased the number of full-time equivalent
jobs by 1.8 million to 4.1 million compared with what those
amounts would have been otherwise.
That is what CBO says about the recovery. And the Congressional
Budget Office projects that the Recovery Act will continue to create
jobs. It projects that the Recovery Act will create the peak number of
jobs in the third quarter of this year and then begin to taper off. But
we do not want to abruptly cut that job creation off. In this fragile
economy, the last thing we should do is to cut back on this proven job
creator. It works. It has been working.
We passed the Recovery Act to give a needed boost to our economy. The
bill was designed to work over 2 years. That was the intent of it. We
have successfully started down the road to recovery, but if we were to
withdraw these critical funds, we would risk causing further damage to
our fragile economy. Revoking the Recovery Act funds now would send
exactly the wrong signal to the American economy and to unemployed
Americans.
The Thune amendment would also cut other valuable spending programs.
The Thune amendment's spending cuts are arbitrary and they are
restrictive. For example, one provision in the Thune substitute
amendment would freeze the salaries of all Federal employees except for
Members of the armed services. But what about civilian defense workers?
What about law enforcement? What about border protection?
Another provision would cap the total number of Federal employees at
current levels. If an agency needed to hire a new employee, it would
first need to find an existing employee to fire. This would
dramatically reduce the flexibility of agencies to make hiring
decisions.
The Thune substitute amendment would also cut discretionary spending
by 5 percent across the board for all agencies except the Department of
Veterans Affairs and the Department of Defense. Apparently, this 5-
percent cut would apply to the Department of Homeland Security. It
would apply to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. Apparently, it
would apply to all the intelligence agencies, just to name a few.
The Thune amendment would also, by the way, rescind $80 billion in
appropriated but unspent Federal funds. But just because the funds have
not yet been obligated does not mean they are superfluous. For example,
when money is appropriated to build a battleship, it does not all get
obligated in the first year. By cutting funds that have not yet been
obligated, it would adversely affect the construction of that
battleship.
I support finding ways to make our government more efficient, but
these cuts are arbitrary. They are inappropriately restrictive.
The Thune amendment would also make changes to the new health care
law that would leave more Americans without insurance. The Thune
amendment does this by expanding the affordability exception to the
individual mandate for purchasing health insurance. This expansion
would eliminate coverage for millions of Americans. It would strike at
the heart of health care reform. And the Congressional Budget Office
tells us it would also increase premiums for everybody else.
The Thune amendment, just to repeat, would increase premiums for
millions of Americans who would have health insurance. The irony of
this proposal in the Thune amendment is that it raises money for the
government because the government would not provide as much in tax
credits to Americans to help them buy insurance. That is the irony. But
Congress has just enacted health care reform. Congress just expressed
our Nation's commitment to helping all Americans to buy health
insurance. We should let the new health care law take effect.
The Thune amendment would also propose changes to our medical
liability system that the Senate has rejected many times over the
years. The Thune amendment would cap damages and make other changes to
State laws. This is not the solution to medical malpractice.
While the Congressional Budget Office says these kinds of ideas would
generate savings, we should ask: What is the cost of those savings?
What would be the cost to patients? What would be the cost to States?
The same studies upon which CBO relied in calculating its cost
estimate point out that certain tort reform policies may also increase
the number of risky procedures performed. And these policies may lead
to more patient injuries and more patient deaths.
One study upon which CBO relied said that these policies would lead
to a 0.2-percent increase in mortality.
That sounds an awfully high price to pay.
Imposing national tort reform standards flies in the face of our
Nation's civil liability system. That system has always been forged at
the State level. And national damage caps would put patient safety at
risk.
The Thune amendment employs some of the offsets that it does because
it drops the oilspill liability tax. Imagine that: The proponents of
the Thune
[[Page S4916]]
amendment would rather put the recovery at risk by cutting back the
Recovery Act, they would rather cut health insurance coverage in health
reform, and they would rather expose patients to greater risk. They
would rather do all these things than raise taxes on big oil, to pay
for oilspills.
And the Thune amendment employs some of the offsets that it does,
because it drops some of the tax loophole closers in the underlying
substitute amendment. The underlying substitute amendment closes
loopholes in the Tax Code that unfairly benefit certain individuals.
One such loophole is carried interest. The underlying substitute
removes an inequity of the Tax Code that allows investment managers who
operate through partnerships to have the income that they earn for
their services taxed at half the tax rate of other working individuals.
Here's how the carried interest tax loophole works. An investment
manager joins a partnership with some investors. But the investment
manager does not provide any capital. The investment manager provides
services.
The investment manager contracts to receive compensation not in the
form of wage income, but in the form of a share of the partnership.
That way, the investment manager gets to pay lower capital gains tax
rates on the investment manager's income, rather than the higher wage
tax rates that the rest of Americans pay.
The underlying substitute says: No longer should we allow investment
managers to have a better tax rate than teachers or doctors or
firefighters. Our amendment plugs this tax loophole. But the Thune
amendment would strike that provision. The Thune amendment would allow
that tax loophole to continue.
The underlying substitute also includes an important provision that
closes another serious inequity in the Tax Code.
Lawyers, doctors, and other professionals who operate as partners or
sole proprietors are currently subject to Social Security taxes on
their service income up to $106,800. And they are subject to Medicare
taxes on all their service income. Everybody is. But some doctors and
lawyers organize themselves as an S corporation and they can pay
themselves an artificially low salary. That way, they can avoid paying
Social Security or Medicare taxes on much of the income generated by
their services. That is just not fair.
And what is more, it hurts the Social Security and Medicare trust
funds.
The choice of entity should not affect an individual's tax liability
for his or her services.
Unfortunately, Senator Thune's amendment does not close this
loophole. The Thune amendment would strike this loophole closer in the
underlying substitute.
The underlying substitute would also close several foreign tax
loopholes.
The Senate Finance Committee developed these loophole closers jointly
with the House Ways and Means Committee, with the assistance of the
Treasury Department.
These loophole-closers would shut down highly structured and complex
transactions implemented by multinational corporations to avoid paying
U.S. tax.
These tax benefits claimed by the multinational corporations were
clearly not contemplated when Congress passed the tax law.
Closing these loopholes would preserve and create jobs here in
America. Closing these loopholes would discourage U.S. multinational
corporations from shipping American jobs overseas.
Permitting the continued exploitation of these loopholes would only
encourage U.S. multinationals to invest additional capital overseas,
rather than here in America. Allowing these loopholes to continue would
result in the loss of American jobs.
The underlying substitute amendment tackles these loopholes. Senator
Thune's amendment, on the other hand, ignores them. By not addressing
them, the Thune amendment would allow this irresponsibility to
continue.
And so, the Thune amendment would put the recovery at risk by
curtailing the Recovery Act. It would cut the number of Americans with
health insurance and raise premiums. It would nationalize medical
malpractice law, putting patients at risk. And it would protect big oil
and multinational corporations that ship their jobs overseas.
I urge my colleagues to oppose the Thune amendment.
And I urge my colleagues to support the bill before us. Let us
protect and strengthen this fragile economic recovery. Let us preserve
and create jobs, here in America. And let us enact the American Jobs
and Closing Tax Loopholes Act.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Alabama.
Mr. SESSIONS. Mr. President, I know Senator Thune will be here in a
moment. I saw him just a while ago.
One of the things hurting our economy is that Congress is sending no
message whatsoever that we are serious about reducing the
uncontrollable debt that every economist says is unsustainable, and
that this is a cloud over our economic recovery. The sooner we quit
thinking we can make the economy rebound by just spending a few more
billion dollars and increasing our debt, the better off we will be and
we will get on a sound track to go forward.
I know good people can disagree, but I believe very strongly in this,
and I just wanted to share that thought.
Oilspill in Alabama
I would like to make a few brief comments about the oilspill in the
Gulf of Mexico, and my home State of Alabama. I was there Friday and
visited Orange Beach, Gulf Shores, Dauphin Island, and Bayou La Batre,
examined the beaches and talked with our good mayors and other
officials who are there. There are a few things I would like to share
that indicate we are not where we need to be.
I have not been one who wants to run out and blame the President for
everything. But I do believe as we are now going into day 57 that we
need to understand our response is not working well. It could be much
better.
For example, I visited Mayor Tony Kennon and his team in Orange
Beach. Perdido Pass has a very strong current. You would think you
could put up boom and stop oil from coming in. They told us oil was out
there. They were expecting it to come in, maybe the biggest amount they
had expected since the beginning of the spill. It was expected to hit
the coast this past Saturday or Sunday, and it did indeed hit. The city
is developing their own plan with their own engineer about how to deal
with the currents and the flow of oil to keep it out of the estuaries
that are inside of Perdido Pass.
It is complicated. They had a top engineer, Henry Seawell, one of
Alabama's best. He was there working on it. I just happen to know him.
But the Coast Guard was not there; BP was not there. The mayor said:
You know, we feel like we are not even at the table, we are
not at the children's table. They are not talking to us. But
we know more about how to deal with this pass than anybody
else in the U.S. Government because we have been working on
it, it is our area, and we are trying to protect it.
Sure enough, the oil came. We were behind schedule. They started
late. Nobody had done anything until the city started, apparently a
good bit of oil got in and that is not good. It also got on the beach.
We can clean that up pretty quickly, however a lot hit the beach.
Then a little further down the beach, at Gulf Shores, we had a
similar discussion. I went to Fort Morgan, across the mouth of the
Mobile Bay where Admiral Farragut sailed in, and we went across to
Dauphin Island. The mayor there, Jeff Collier, had some of the same
concerns as Mayor Robert Craft in Gulf Shores. Then I went up and met
with Mayor Stan Wright, the mayor of Bayou La Batre, himself a seafood
processor. He noted to me, and has repeatedly stated, that Bayou La
Batre probably represents the largest seafood processing on the entire
gulf coast. They are basically being shut down, and a lot of people who
work there are losing their jobs. They are low-income workers who do
not have extra money to live on, and they are hurting, really hurting.
If we are going to receive money from BP, they need to get it out there
to the people right now, before they lose their homes or have their
power cut off. The mayor told me how people are calling him about their
electricity being cut off. It is not a little matter. The whole
situation is a big deal.
I am glad the President has gone to the gulf coast. I am hopeful
tonight we
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will hear some good ideas for progress. I just wanted to share one
thing that struck me very vividly. Mayor Kennon's team in Orange Beach
told us they had seen a strip of compact oil from the air and a boat
about 6 miles offshore. It had the red color, thick process--a strip
about 30 miles wide and 2 miles long. This was Friday morning. It was
expected to hit Friday night or early Saturday morning. Nobody knew for
sure. But it had been out there for a number of days.
So we are asking, Why don't we put a skimmer there? This is the only
thing coming in that threatens the beaches. Apparently there were two
strips of this offshore at some distance. It represents a significant
threat. You could see that threat getting closer and closer. The
obvious thought--Mr. President, having been from Alaska, you know the
importance of these matters--if you had a good skimmer--where two boats
pull the boom and direct the oil into a central location, then you can
get it out and put it in a barge or tanker.
There was not any. It would have been rather easy, I suggest, with a
good skimmer, to have gone out, with plenty of time to scoop up almost
all of that oil or at least a big portion of it. That was not done. It
kept coming in, and coming in, and basically by Saturday it was hitting
the beaches.
You ask, where are they? We are not talking with one another enough,
it seems to me. It does appear there are more skimmers, more boom, more
vessels, equipment, and pumps available around the world that could be
called on to assist, and we have not accepted all offers of assistance.
Nor have we, apparently, sought to lease, buy or purchase the boom,
pumps, and skimmers that might help us.
I was just looking at a press release today that stated, Admiral
Allen, the national incident commander, Provides Guidance to Ensure
Expedited Jones Act Waiver Processing Should It Be Needed.''
He says he will process any requests for waivers of the Jones Act.
For some reason the admiral is still talking about waivers and
offering to expedite them. Who is requesting them? Why doesn't he
request it? If there is a ship that can skim, it can be brought down to
the gulf coast, and it would make a big difference. In fact, I saw the
admiral, I believe, the day before yesterday on the television say we
need to do a better job. This would have been Monday. We need to do a
better job of intercepting the oil between the spill site and the
shore.
Good. I thought it might be harder to do. I thought it might be
little splotches here and there, all over, and it would be impossible
to scoop it all up. But if it is moving, and it tends to move in lines
and fairly compact 30-foot strips, then with good equipment we can make
a big dent and just stop it.
So I don't know what the problem is. But we do know 17 countries have
offered to help, however we only have two skimmers, as I understand it,
in the gulf, and those are from Mexico--which we are glad to have.
Pumps have been offered. I do not believe we have taken advantage of
that. It takes some pretty good pumping equipment to get this oil
soaked up, and only 600,000 feet of boom have been received from
abroad. The UK has also offered us dispersants, which we have not
taken.
I don't know what all the details are, but it seems to me that we can
and must do a better job of coordinating. We need to ensure people who
need resources are paid now, and we need to understand that there is
great potential for effective skimming to occur where the oil has
formulated and configured in groups so it can be skimmed. That
apparently is more feasible than a lot of people understand. We need to
be focusing on that.
The people along the gulf coast are upset about it. One mayor told
me: I am a man of good judgment. I am worried about BP's slow response.
They talk about responding. They talk about paying, but not enough
payment is actually getting out where we have clear cases of
substantial losses. Of course, the economy is not where it has been and
where we need to see it develop. The beach areas probably wouldn't have
been as strong this year as previous years because of the economic
downturn. But the testimony from people at public meetings I have
attended is crystal clear that we have almost a 50-percent drop in
reservations, a 50-percent drop in bookings, and this ripples through
the entire community. We already have real estate problems. We already
have a little decline in beach attendance. Now we have all this
horrible news on the TV and large amounts of cancellations. Some people
do need money now. This process needs to be accelerated, and I hope we
will hear something in some of what the President tells us tonight. I
think he has heard that. He has been down to the gulf coast. He has
talked to people. He probably has a better understanding today, after
we are 2 months into it, than he previously had.
Maybe we can make this system work a little better. I don't only want
to complain. I am thankful the President is showing attention. I am
thankful he has stepped out and is showing some leadership. But for
some reason, there still seems to be a lack of connection between the
talk up at the top and what is happening on the ground. I have been
there. I have talked to people. People are not getting money. People
are in serious crisis already, people who would be entitled to receive
moneys. I don't think BP should pay out money fraudulently. They don't
need to pay those who don't deserve it. They ought to be careful in how
they handle these payments. But for the most part, people are making
legitimate claims. Some of them are desperate now. I don't think we
have a unified effective plan to intercept as much of the oil as we
could offshore. Nor have we had the kind of support from the Federal
Government we would like to see, with scientifically determined
processes, placing boom and skimming equipment to stop the flow of the
oil, particularly into our estuaries, including Mobile Bay.
Mobile Bay is not that wide of an opening. People thought we could
stop it. You could put boom across and stop it. The truth is, with the
tides, it is a strong current. Anchors won't hold it. When water moves
in, it will go over or under or even break the boom. It is not an easy
thing. We need some sort of Chevron-like layers of boom outside the
entrance to try to catch as much as we can before it comes in. A
little, but I don't think enough, effort has been made. In fact, we now
had a significant amount of oil that have gotten into that great
estuary.
I wanted to share those thoughts. I believe we can do better. I
believe oil production in the gulf is essential for the national
interest. I believe this spill, this accident should not have happened.
I believe if people had been exceedingly careful and competent in what
they did, this would not have happened. I believe after this accident,
there is going to be a complete review by every company out there. I
think we will have an even lower possibility of accidents in the
future. But we need more confidence that blowout preventers work, and
that we have safety mechanisms in place. We need more confidence that
this will happen. We need to understand there is always a possibility
that some sort of blowout or spill will occur, but we can do better to
prevent it. We can do better about plugging the leak or capturing the
oil where it comes out of the pipe. I believe all of these are
possible.
I am not happy. I am disappointed that we weren't better prepared in
case such an accident did occur. Very disappointed. I believe the oil
industry, in particular BP's plan, as the Mobile Press Register has
pointed out, was not well thought out. Their plan talked about what to
do with walruses and things such as that. We don't have any walruses on
the gulf coast. This was not a well thought out plan. Criticism is
justified in many different areas.
I thank the Chair for the opportunity to share my thoughts. Again, I
appreciate the President visiting the gulf coast. Hopefully, they are
breaking down some of these dysfunctional areas to get us to a higher
level of response and effectiveness, and maybe they will also be able
to continue to make progress in reducing the amount of flow coming out
of this well. Obviously, that is the most critical point.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Gillibrand). The clerk will call the
roll.
The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
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Mr. BARRASSO. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. BARRASSO. Madam President, the tax extenders bill includes a
settlement that involves a class action lawsuit that is known as Cobell
v. Salazar. The total cost of this settlement is about $3.4 billion.
This settlement will affect hundreds of thousands of Indian people
across the United States who are class members in this lawsuit. It was
signed last December by the Obama administration with the lead
plaintiffs and their attorneys. Part of the settlement provides $1.4
billion to individual Indians whose trust assets have been mismanaged
by the Federal Government for over 100 years. Another $2 billion would
be used by the Department of the Interior to consolidate Indian land
ownership to prevent a repeat of these claims.
On Wednesday, June 9, 2010, Attorney General Holder and Secretary
Salazar sent letters to the Senate leaders opposing an amendment I
filed on Tuesday, June 8. My amendment corrects serious flaws in the
settlement. I am going to respond to their letter as well as explain my
amendment.
The Attorney General and the Secretary argue that the amendment makes
material changes to the settlement that would render it void. To begin
with, I must point out that the parties have changed their settlement
in material ways several times--several times--since it was announced
that the agreement had been reached. Whenever they deem fit, they
change it. For the reasons I am about to go into, they should change it
again. If they don't, then Congress should act.
In their letter to leadership, the Attorney General and Secretary
Salazar say:
The nature of any settlement agreement is that no one gets
everything they asked for.
I know the Cobell case has waged on and on in the courts for 14
years. It has been up and down on appeal many times--too many times. In
fact, it is on appeal right now. So I support settling this case. I
support providing fair compensation to people harmed by decades of
Federal mismanagement. I support consolidating the fractionated
ownership of land to prevent the recurrence of problems that led to
this court case. But I cannot support the settlement as drafted by the
administration. It has flaws, and I believe some of them are very
serious. All of them can and should be fixed without making major
changes to its overall structure. Leaders in Indian country agree.
I ask unanimous consent that a letter dated June 11, 2010, from the
National Congress of American Indians to Senator Dorgan and to me be
printed in the Record following my remarks.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
(See exhibit 1.)
Mr. BARRASSO. Madam President, the National Congress of American
Indians' letter states that the changes in my amendment address
legitimate concerns that have been raised by tribal leaders and Indian
people. The NCAI letter references resolutions passed by the Affiliated
Tribes of Northwest Indians and the Great Plains Tribal Chairmen's
Association supporting my amendment.
So what does my amendment do? It addresses five significant
weaknesses in the settlement. The first issue is attorneys fees. This
settlement was signed by the Department of Justice and two of the
plaintiffs on December 7, 2009. Originally, the settlement said that
Congress had to approve it in 24 days--by New Year's Eve. Well,
supporters said there was no time for a hearing; Congress had to act
immediately. I disagreed. Any $3.4 billion settlement paid for by
taxpayers that affects the lives of hundreds of thousands of people
should have a hearing before Congress.
I requested that the Committee on Indian Affairs hold a hearing on
the settlement. Chairman Dorgan scheduled one nearly 6 months ago and
that hearing was December 17, 2009. During the hearing, it was
disclosed that the parties had entered into a separate agreement
covering attorneys fees. In the side agreement, the plaintiffs' lawyers
agreed not to ask the court for more than $99.9 million in
presettlement attorneys' fees and costs, and the administration agreed
not to argue that the attorneys should get anything less than $50
million. So, in effect, the two parties quietly agreed that the
plaintiffs' attorneys should be paid between $50 million and $100
million.
This separate agreement also provided that when attorneys asked the
court for presettlement fees, the attorneys must provide
contemporaneous time records, but they said only ``where available.''
This is a very remarkable agreement, especially for a court case that
was pretty much all about inadequate government recordkeeping in the
first place.
What the government has done is agreed not to demand
contemporaneously prepared time records when the attorneys ask the
court for their fees--fees that will be taken directly out of the funds
that are supposed to be distributed to the class members in the suit.
This settlement should be about compensating the individual Indians who
were harmed by government mismanagement. My amendment requires
production of contemporaneous records and it caps the fees at $50
million. Fifty million dollars is an amount that both parties agreed
would not be appealed. It is their number, so it must be fair.
Besides the issue of attorneys fees, there have been other concerns
raised about the settlement--about the possibility of a multimillion
dollar incentive award to named plaintiffs; about the qualification of
the bank where the money will be deposited; about the role of Indian
tribes and the land consolidation aspect of the settlement; and about
the formula for distributing the money. My amendment addresses each of
these issues.
The amendment would also require that any ``incentive awards'' to
named plaintiffs be justified by documented expenses. Leading the case
of Indian landowners against the government for 14 years has
undoubtedly been an exhausting burden and an expensive burden. The
named plaintiffs should be allowed to ask the court to have those
expenses reimbursed. My amendment would limit any such award to an
aggregate amount of $15 million and only for the expenses incurred by
the class representatives. This is the amount the plaintiffs told us is
their total estimated out-of-pocket expenses. The amendment would allow
full reimbursement of these expenses.
My amendment also addresses the selection of the bank that will hold
the $1.4 billion in settlement funds. The settlement is especially lax
in setting standards to ensure the safety of these funds--lax, I
believe, to the point of being irresponsible. My amendment simply
requires the court to consider certain factors when approving a
proposed bank: experience, a history of regulatory compliance, plus
competitive interest rates and fees. These factors are important
because if anything happens to the money, then the class members bear
the risk of the loss. I cannot fathom why asking the court to simply
consider these commonsense protections will void the settlement.
The amendment I have offered will require the Secretary of the
Interior to consult with Indian tribes on implementation of the Indian
land consolidation program. In order for this $2 billion consolidation
program to succeed, the tribal governments should be partners in
implementation. The amendment would require that to happen.
Finally, my amendment would provide relief for certain class members
for whom the pro rata formula used in the settlement does not work.
This formula is simple and will be easy to use. That is why the
administration likes it. In many cases, the formula won't work and will
lead to unfair results. It is necessary that we create a system for
individual class members with unique circumstances to petition the
court for a nonstandard settlement payment.
Under my amendment, the court would be provided with broad
flexibility to make discretionary awards in appropriate cases.
In closing, I urge Members of the Senate to support this amendment to
the Cobell settlement provisions in this measure. My amendment doesn't
change the structure of the settlement. It does improve, however, the
agreement for the hundreds of thousands of class members covered by the
settlement.
What my amendment doesn't do is void the agreement. Let me repeat, my
[[Page S4919]]
amendment does not void the agreement; it does not void the settlement.
Plaintiffs have the ability to void the settlement if they don't
believe the changes are in the best interests of the class members. The
administration can void it if they don't believe there should be
financial standards for selection of the bank that will hold and manage
$1.4 billion of settlement funds. By passing this amendment, we will
not void the agreement.
Congress has the obligation to never rubberstamp an agreement and to
not rubberstamp this agreement.
Adopting my amendment is the right thing to do.
I yield the floor.
Exhibit 1
National Congress
of American Indians,
Washington, DC, June 11, 2010.
Re Cobell Settlement and Senator Barrasso's Amendment 4313 to
the American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act of 2010.
Hon. Byron Dorgan,
Chair, Committee on Indian Affairs, U.S. Senate, Washington,
DC.
Hon. John Barrasso,
Vice Chair, Committee on Indian Affairs, U.S. Senate,
Washington, DC.
Dear Chairman Dorgan and Vice Chairman Barrasso: As you
know, a very important vote may soon occur in the Senate.
Currently the Senate is considering H.R. 4213, the American
Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act of 2010. For Indian people
across the country the most important provision in the
legislation is Section 607, which would authorize the
settlement of the Cobell v. Salazar litigation over federal
mismanagement of Indian trust funds. Senator Barrasso has
proposed an amendment that would address some concerns about
the settlement that have been raised by tribal leaders and
Indian people. These are legitimate concerns that have come
from the grassroots in Indian country, and it is our hope
that the parties and the Senate try to find common ground on
these concerns.
The National Congress of American Indians has long
supported a settlement of this litigation because it is time
to bring justice to Indian people and because the contentious
litigation has distracted from efforts to address the many
other issues that Indian country faces. When the settlement
was first announced in December of 2009, there was a general
feeling of elation and relief throughout Indian country. We
are extremely grateful to the Administration and to Eloise
Cobell and her team for working so hard on this settlement
and bringing it to the brink of resolution.
However, we also believe that Ms. Cobell described it well
when she said that this is a ``bittersweet victory'' for
Indian country. There is no doubt that the injuries to Indian
people have been much greater than the compensation they will
receive. In addition, over the past several months, Indian
tribes and Indian people have had an opportunity to more
closely examine the details of the settlement. Hearings have
been held in Congress, and meetings have taken place on
reservations across the country. As might be expected with a
class action settlement of this size and complexity, the
details have generated considerable discussion and some
disagreements.
Senator Barrasso has solicited the views of tribal leaders
on the details of the settlement and has filed a proposed
amendment. The Affiliated Tribes of Northwest Indians and the
Great Plains Tribal Chairman's Association, two large and
well respected regional tribal organizations, have both
passed resolutions favoring Senator Barrasso's amendment. A
similar resolution has been submitted to NCAI for
consideration during our Midyear Session during the week of
June 20. However, NCAI's consideration of the resolution may
happen after Congress has voted.
As you know, both the Administration and the Cobell
plaintiffs have raised concerns that any amendments to the
Cobell settlement legislation would render the settlement
null and void. We understand the need for the parties to a
difficult settlement to adopt this posture. However, we have
little doubt that if Congress were to make modest and
reasonable adjustments, the parties will readily amend the
settlement agreement to conform to the implementing
legislation.
NCAI's interest is that Congress passes a settlement that
is responsive to legitimate concerns raised by tribal leaders
and members of the class, and that a contested floor vote on
these issues may not be conducive to our shared goal of
settling the litigation. I will briefly address the elements
of Senator Barrasso's amendment. Amendment 4313 would:
1. Cap attorneys' fees at $50 million and incentive awards
at expenses up to $15 million. The settlement was accompanied
by a side agreement that the federal government would not
contest an award of attorney's fees in a range between $50 to
$100 million. These attorneys' fees have generated
considerable discussion. Most account holders will receive an
award in the range of $1500, which is less than what was
expected. Over the years, the Cobell plaintiffs have
frequently estimated the size of the damages in the hundreds
of billions, so disappointment at the size of the award has
combined with views about the size of the attorneys' fees.
This is a difficult issue because we also recognize that the
Cobell attorneys have worked very hard on the litigation for
the last 14 years, and class action attorneys in Indian law
cases should be fairly compensated on a par with similar
class actions. We suggest that the numbers are not far apart,
and an accommodation could be reached.
2. Require that a special master select the bank that will
handle the $1.4 billion award. The settlement agreement
indicates that the award will be deposited in a bank selected
by the plaintiffs and approved by the court. Senator
Barrasso's amendment would require that court should consider
certain criteria for experience in the handling of large
deposits, compliance with banking laws, and competitiveness
of fees. This appears to be a reasonable provision to ensure
competent and efficient management of the funds.
3. Allow tribes to participate in the land consolidation
program that will occur on their reservations. NCAI strongly
supports Senator Barrasso's proposal to permit tribes to
participate in the land consolidation program that will be
funded by the settlement. Land consolidation is critical for
addressing trust management problems created by fractionation
and preventing future mismanagement. However, Indian tribes
have had concerns about the ability of the Bureau of Indian
Affairs to administer the land consolidation program on the
scale and in the timeframe required by the settlement. Since
1975, Indian tribes have been able to contract with the BIA
to manage BIA programs on their reservations. The Indian Land
Consolidation Program is one of the few programs that does
not allow tribal participation in this way. We believe that
allowing tribal governments to participate in land
consolidation will greatly benefit the program because tribes
have the greatest interest in its success, and because tribes
know the local conditions on their reservations much better
than a centrally-located BIA.
4. Set aside a $50 million fund for class members who may
not be fairly compensated by the formula distribution. The
inclusion of natural resource mismanagement claims within the
settlement has been controversial within Indian country
because it was not a part of the original Cobell claim, and
because the formula would be unfair to some landowners.
Although the resource mismanagement settlement allows an opt-
out, it would be extraordinarily difficult for Indian
landowners to pursue mismanagement claims on their own.
Senator Barrasso's amendment would set-aside $50 million out
of the settlement to make equitable adjustments for certain
landowners who would not be adequately compensated by the
formula. So long as it does not substantially slow down the
operation of the formula distribution, we believe it is
reasonable to set aside a small portion of the settlement to
smooth out some of the inequities of the formula system.
Thank you very much for considering our views on this
important issue. We greatly appreciate the enormous efforts
that all of you have put into resolving the Indian trust
funds litigation.
Sincerely,
Jefferson Keel,
NCAI President.
Mr. BARRASSO. Madam President, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. KAUFMAN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent that the order
for the quorum call be rescinded.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Mr. KAUFMAN. Madam President, I ask unanimous consent to speak as in
morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
Arthur S. Flemming Awards 2009
Mr. KAUFMAN. Madam President, I rise today once again to recognize
some of our Nation's great Federal employees.
This week, the Trachtenberg School at the George Washington
University announced the winners of the annual Arthur S. Flemming
Awards. These distinguished awards for public service have been
bestowed upon outstanding Federal employees for the past 61 years. The
Flemming Awards recognize career Federal employees, both civilian and
military, who have served between 3 and 15 years in government.
Nominees come from across the many departments, agencies, and service
branches. Notable winners include former Senators Elizabeth Dole and
Daniel Patrick Moynihan, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, former Federal
Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker, astronaut Neil Armstrong, among others.
The awards are named for Arthur S. Flemming, who had a long and
exemplary career in public service which spanned from 1939 until his
death in 1996. He served in a number of important roles, including
Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare under President Eisenhower.
[[Page S4920]]
Secretary Flemming also served on the U.S. Civil Service Commission
under Presidents Roosevelt and Truman, the National Advisory Committee
on the Peace Corps under Presidents Kennedy and Johnson, and as
Chairman of the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights under Presidents Nixon,
Ford, Carter, and Reagan. President Clinton awarded him the Medal of
Freedom in 1994.
It is fitting that these awards, which were originally bestowed by
the DC Jaycees, are named for Flemming. His lifetime of dedication to
public service continues to inspire so many.
The Flemming Awards are divided into three categories: applied
science, engineering, and mathematics; basic science; and managerial or
legal achievement. These categories highlight some of the most
outstanding and exciting accomplishments by our public servants who are
helping to lead the way in scientific discovery, efficient public
management, and upholding justice.
This year's medals in applied science, engineering, and mathematics
were won by a trio of brilliant individuals who are keeping America at
the forefront of STEM research.
Dr. Lynn Antonelli is leading the way in developing laser-based
sensors for the Navy. The sensors she and her team created have found
commercial and medical applications, in addition to providing our Navy
vessels with extended optics and sensing underwater.
Dr. Steven Brown of the National Institute of Standards and
Technology--or NIST--also works with light. He and his team have made
great strides in the field of light measurement that have enabled more
detailed environmental imaging of the Earth. His work is
revolutionizing the ability to detect minute changes in the environment
as a result of climate change.
Also winning the applied science, engineering, and mathematics award
is Dr. John Kitching. John has been leading the world's top research
program in atomic measurement. He and his team developed ultra-
miniature devices that can improve the accuracy of GPS,
telecommunications, and medical imaging. They even have important
national security uses, including in the more accurate detection of
chemical toxins.
The three Federal employees who won this year's award for basic
science are pioneers on the cutting edge of science research.
Dr. Dietrich Leibfried is one of NIST's leading experts on quantum
computing. This exciting field could lead to supercomputers faster and
more powerful than the best ones we have today. Dietrich Leibfried is
responsible for many innovations in quantum computing, including the
successful demonstration of a simple, fully programmable quantum
computer, the first step in a long-term effort to build supercomputers
that can handle nationally important applications, such as weather
prediction, secure data encryption, and developing new drugs.
The basic science award is also going to Dr. Shyam Sharan of the
National Cancer Institute at the National Institutes of Health. He has
developed a simple and reliable way to analyze genetic mutations that
increase a patient's chances of developing breast cancer. This will
help doctors identify those who have the highest risk of cancer and
treat them preventively.
Sharing the award with them is Dr. Eite Tiesinga, who works at NIST
on ultra-cold atoms. By manipulating these atoms, scientists can
carefully tune the quantum gases that might one day power quantum
computers. Eite is frequently asked by researchers around the world to
consult on their measurements and findings, and his work on ultra-cold
atoms has put the United States ahead in the race to achieve successful
quantum computing.
Four outstanding public employees were chosen for this year's
managerial and legal achievement medal.
Angela Clowers works at the Government Accountability Office, and she
led the GAO's efforts to audit transportation investments made under
the Recovery Act. Her careful analysis and testimony before Congress
prompted the Department of Transportation to refocus some of its
investments in order to stimulate additional job growth. Angela also
led the GAO's audit of government assistance to the American auto
industry under TARP.
Another who won this award is Dr. Marla Dowell of NIST'S laboratory
in Boulder, CO. Marla leads the world's most comprehensive research
program in laser metrology. She won this award for outstanding
management skills and for leading a team that is developing lasers for
highly accurate measurement of manufacturing equipment. This will have
profound and positive effects on both defense programs and high-tech
businesses.
Kana Enomoto won the award for a distinguished career working on
mental health access. She served as a leader in this area in the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina through her work at the Substance Abuse
and Mental Health Services Administration. Kana also spearheaded
efforts to improve the agency's operations, human resource management,
and other critical functions as the Acting Deputy Administrator.
The fourth winner of this award is Natalie Harrop of the Air Force
Global Logistics Center in Utah. Natalie distinguished herself as a
lead budget analyst for the Air Force's 748th Supply Chain Management
Group. She revolutionized the group's financial management, and her new
system is being implemented across the 448th Supply Chain Management
Wing. It is saving hundreds of work hours and over $5 million.
These 10 men and women are not an exception, they are exemplary. They
represent the norm of excellence of our civil service. They have
achieved great things and now join the ranks of those who share the
Arthur S. Flemming Award for their great contribution to our Nation.
I hope my colleagues will join me in congratulating the winners of
the 2009 Arthur S. Flemming Awards and thanking them all for their
service. They are all truly great Federal employees.
I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. BEGICH. 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. BEGICH. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the following
amendments be debated concurrently for the total time specified in this
agreement: Sanders, 4318; Vitter, 4312; Franken, 4311; that the Franken
amendment be modified with the changes at the desk; with the debate
time divided as follows: 20 minutes equally divided between Senators
Sanders and Inhofe; 20 minutes equally divided between Senators Baucus
and Vitter or their designees; and 20 minutes equally divided between
Senators Franken and Vitter or their designees, with no intervening
amendments in order; that each of the listed amendments in this
agreement be subject to an affirmative 60-vote threshold; and that if
the amendment, as modified where applicable, achieves that threshold,
then it be agreed to and the motion to reconsider be laid upon the
table; that if the amendment does not achieve that threshold, then it
be withdrawn; that prior to each vote, there be 2 minutes of debate,
equally divided and controlled, and that after the first vote, the
succeeding votes be limited to 10 minutes each; that upon the use or
yielding back of the total time specified above, the Senate proceed to
vote in relation to the amendments in the order listed.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered.
The amendment (No. 4311), as modified, is as follows:
At the appropriate place, insert the following:
TITLE __--OFFICE OF THE HOMEOWNER ADVOCATE
SEC. _01. OFFICE OF THE HOMEOWNER ADVOCATE.
(a) Establishment.--There is established in the Department
of the Treasury an office to be known as the ``Office of the
Homeowner Advocate'' (in this subtitle referred to as the
``Office'').
(b) Director.--
(1) In general.--The Director of the Office of the
Homeowner Advocate (in this subtitle referred to as the
``Director'') shall report directly to the Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability, and shall
be entitled to compensation at the same rate as the highest
rate of basic pay established for the Senior Executive
Service under section 5382 of title 5, United States Code.
[[Page S4921]]
(2) Appointment.--The Director shall be appointed by the
Secretary, after consultation with the Secretary of the
Department of Housing and Urban Development, and without
regard to the provisions of title 5, United States Code,
relating to appointments in the competitive service or the
Senior Executive Service.
(3) Qualifications.--An individual appointed under
paragraph (2) shall have--
(A) experience as an advocate for homeowners; and
(B) experience dealing with mortgage servicers.
(4) Restriction on employment.--An individual may be
appointed as Director only if such individual was not an
officer or employee of either a mortgage servicer or the
Department of the Treasury during the 4-year period preceding
the date of such appointment.
(5) Hiring authority.--The Director shall have the
authority to hire staff, obtain support by contract, and
manage the budget of the Office of the Homeowner Advocate.
SEC. _02. FUNCTIONS OF THE OFFICE.
(a) In General.--It shall be the function of the Office--
(1) to assist homeowners, housing counselors, and housing
lawyers in resolving problems with the Home Affordable
Modification Program of the Making Home Affordable initiative
of the Secretary, authorized under the Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008 (in this subtitle referred to as
the ``Home Affordable Modification Program'')
(2) to identify areas, both individual and systematic, in
which homeowners, housing counselors, and housing lawyers
have problems in dealings with the Home Affordable
Modification Program;
(3) to the extent possible, to propose changes in the
administrative practices of the Home Affordable Modification
Program, to mitigate problems identified under paragraph (2);
(4) to identify potential legislative changes which may be
appropriate to mitigate such problems; and
(5) to implement other programs and initiatives that the
Director deems important to assisting homeowners, housing
counselors, and housing lawyers in resolving problems with
the Home Affordable Modification Program, which may include--
(A) running a triage hotline for homeowners at risk of
foreclosure;
(B) providing homeowners with access to housing counseling
programs of the Department of Housing and Urban Development
at no cost to the homeowner;
(C) developing Internet tools related to the Home
Affordable Modification Program; and
(D) developing training and educational materials.
(b) Authority.--
(1) In general.--Staff designated by the Director shall
have the authority to implement servicer remedies, on a case-
by-case basis, subject to the approval of the Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury for Financial Stability.
(2) Resolution of homeowner concerns.--The Office shall, to
the extent possible, resolve all homeowner concerns not later
than 30 days after the opening of a case with such homeowner.
(c) Commencement of Operations.--The Office shall commence
its operations, as required by this subtitle, not later than
3 months after the date of enactment of this Act.
(d) Sunset.--The Office shall cease operations as of the
date on which the Home Affordable Modification Program ceases
to operate.
SEC. _03. RELATIONSHIP WITH EXISTING ENTITIES.
(a) Transfer.--The Office shall coordinate and centralize
all complaint escalations relating to the Home Affordable
Modification Program.
(b) Hotline.--The HOPE hotline (or any successor triage
hotline) shall reroute all complaints relating to the Home
Affordable Modification Program to the Office.
(c) Coordination.--The Office shall coordinate with the
compliance office of the Office of Financial Stability of the
Department of the Treasury and the Homeownership Preservation
Office of the Department of the Treasury.
SEC. _04. RULE OF CONSTRUCTION.
Nothing in this section shall prohibit a mortgage servicer
from evaluating a homeowner for eligibility under the Home
Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program while a case is
still open with the Office of the Homeowner Advocate. Nothing
in this section may be construed to relieve any loan services
from otherwise applicable rules, directives, or similar
guidance under the Home Affordable Modification Program
relating to the continuation or completion of foreclosure
proceedings.
SEC. _05. REPORTS TO CONGRESS.
(a) Testimony.--The Director shall be available to testify
before the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs
of the Senate and the Committee on Financial Services of the
House of Representatives, not less frequently than 4 times a
year, or at any time at the request of the Chairs of either
committee.
(b) Reports.--Once annually, the Director shall provide a
detailed report to Congress on the Home Affordable
Modification Program. Such report shall contain full and
substantive analysis, in addition to statistical information,
including, at a minimum--
(1) data and analysis of the types and volume of complaints
received from homeowners, housing counselors, and housing
lawyers, broken down by category of servicer, except that
servicers may not be identified by name in the report;
(2) a summary of not fewer than 20 of the most serious
problems encountered by Home Affordable Modification Program
participants, including a description of the nature of such
problems;
(3) to the extent known, identification of the 10 most
litigated issues for Home Affordable Modification Program
participants, including recommendations for mitigating such
disputes;
(4) data and analysis on the resolutions of the complaints
received from homeowners, housing counselors, and housing
lawyers;
(5) identification of any programs or initiatives that the
Office has taken to improve the Home Affordable Modification
Program;
(6) recommendations for such administrative and legislative
action as may be appropriate to resolve problems encountered
by Home Affordable Modification Program participants; and
(7) such other information as the Director may deem
advisable.
SEC. _06. FUNDING.
Amounts made available for the costs of administration of
the Home Affordable Modification Program that are not
otherwise obligated shall be available to carry out the
duties of the Office. Funding shall be maintained at levels
adequate to reasonably carry out the functions of the Office.
SEC. _07. PROHIBITION ON PARTICIPATION IN MAKING HOME
AFFORDABLE FOR BORROWERS WHO STRATEGICALLY
DEFAULT.
No mortgage may be modified under the Making Home
Affordable Program, or with any funds from the Troubled Asset
Relief Program, unless the servicer of the mortgage loan has
determined, in accordance with standards and requirements
established by the Secretary of the Treasury, that the
mortgagor cannot afford to make payments under the terms of
the existing mortgage loan. The Secretary of the Treasury, in
consultation with the Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development, shall issue rules to carry out this section not
later than 90 days after the date of enactment of this Act.
SEC. _08. PUBLIC AVAILABILITY OF INFORMATION.
(a) Public Availability of Data.--The Secretary of the
Treasury shall revise the guidelines for the Home Affordable
Modification Program of the Making Home Affordable initiative
of the Secretary of the Treasury, authorized under the
Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 (Public Law 110-
343), to establish that the data collected by the Secretary
of the Treasury from each mortgage servicer and lender
participating in the Program is made public in accordance
with subsection (2).
(b) Content.--Not more than 60 days after each monthly
deadline for submission of data by mortgage servicers and
lender participating in the program, the Treasury shall make
all data tables available to the public at the individual
record level. This data shall include but not be limited to--
(1) higher risk loans, including loans made in connection
with any program to provide expanded loan approvals, shall be
reported separately;
(2) disclose--
(A) the rate or pace at which such mortgages are becoming
seriously delinquent;
(B) whether such rate or pace is increasing or decreasing;
(C) if there are certain subsets within the loans covered
by this section that have greater or lesser rates or paces of
delinquency; and
(D) if such subsets exist, the characteristics of such
subset of mortgages;
(3) with respect to the loss mitigation efforts of the
loan--
(A) the processes and practices that the reporter has in
effect to minimize losses on mortgages covered by this
section; and
(B) the manner and methods by which such processes and
practices are being monitored for effectiveness;
(4) disclose, with respect to loans that are or become 60
or more days past due, (provided that for purposes of
disclosure under this paragraph that each loan should have a
unique number that is not the same as any loan number the
borrower, originator, or servicer uses), the following
attributes--
(A) the original loan amount;
(B) the current loan amount;
(C) the loan-to-value ratio and combined loan-to-value
ratio, both at origination and currently, and the number of
liens on the property;
(D) the property valuation at the time of origination of
the loan, and all subsequent property valuations and the date
of each valuation;
(E) each relevant credit score of each borrower obtained at
any time in connection with the loan, with the date of the
credit score, to the extent allowed by existing law;
(F) whether the loan has any mortgage or other credit
insurance or guarantee;
(G) the current interest rate on such loan;
(H) any rate caps and floors if the loan is an adjustable
rate mortgage loan;
(I) the adjustable rate mortgage index or indices for such
loan;
(J) whether the loan is currently past due, and if so how
many days such loan is past due;
[[Page S4922]]
(K) the total number of days the loan has been past due at
any time;
(L) whether the loan is subject to a balloon payment;
(M) the date of each modification of the loan;
(N) whether any amounts of loan principal has been deferred
or written off, and if so, the date and amount of each
deferral and the date and amount of each writedown;
(O) whether the interest rate was changed from a rate that
could adjust to a fixed rate, and if so, the period of time
for which the rate will be fixed;
(P) the amount by which the interest rate on the loan was
reduced, and for what period of time it was reduced;
(Q) if the interest rate was reduced or fixed for a period
of time less than the remaining loan term, on what dates, and
to what rates, could the rate potentially increase in the
future;
(R) whether the loan term was modified, and if so, whether
it was extended or shortened, and by what amount of time;
(S) whether the loan is in the process of foreclosure or
similar procedure, whether judicial or otherwise; and
(T) whether a foreclosure or similar procedure, whether
judicial or otherwise, has been completed.
(c) Guidelines and Regulations.--The Secretary of the
Treasury shall establish guidelines and regulations
necessary--
(1) to ensure that the privacy of individual consumers is
appropriately protected in the reports under this section;
(2) to make the data reported under this subsection
available on a public website with no cost to access the
data, in a consistent format;
(3) to update the data no less frequently than monthly;
(4) to establish procedures for disclosing such data to the
public on a public website with no cost to access the data;
and
(5) to allow the Secretary to make such deletions as the
Secretary may determine to be appropriate to protect any
privacy interest of any loan modification applicant,
including the deletion or alteration of the applicant's name
and identification number.
(d) Exception.--No data shall have to be disclosed if it
voids or violates existing contracts between the Secretary of
Treasury and mortgage servicers as part of the Making Home
Affordable Program.
Mr. BEGICH. Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, this country has a $13 trillion national
debt and a record-breaking deficit, and it is time we began to address
that issue.
This country has the potential now to transform our energy system
away from fossil fuel, away from offshore drilling into energy
efficiency and sustainable energy, and when we do that, we create
millions of good-paying jobs over a period of years. That is what this
amendment does.
Over the last decade, the five
largest oil companies in America--
ExxonMobil, Chevron, ConocoPhillips, BP, and Shell--made over $750
billion in profits. These profitable companies do not deserve to
continue to have major tax breaks that in some cases not only prevent
them from paying anything in taxes but enable them to get huge tax
refunds from the IRS.
What the Sanders-Menendez-Whitehouse-Wyden-Lautenberg amendment would
do is eliminate three major loopholes. It would bring $35 billion into
our coffers over a 10-year period. It would use $25 billion of those
$35 billion for deficit reduction. It would use $10 billion to fund
energy conservation and sustainable energy and in the process create
over 100,000 new jobs over a period of years.
It may make sense to somebody, but it does not make sense to me that
we have a company such as ExxonMobil, which has been the most
profitable company in the history of the world, making huge profits and
last year not only paying nothing in taxes but getting a refund from
the Treasury of $156 million. Let me repeat that. ExxonMobil, the most
profitable corporation in the history of the world--year after year,
huge profits--last year not only paid nothing in taxes but received a
$156 million check from the taxpayers of this country to help them.
That is absurd.
ExxonMobil is not the only company to enjoy that kind of outrageous
tax treatment. Chevron received a $19 million tax refund; Valero
Energy, a $157 million refund; and ConocoPhillips received over $450
million in tax breaks from the oil and gas manufacturing deduction over
the past 3 years.
I am going to yield the floor in a moment because I want to refute
some of what my friend from Oklahoma will be saying.
Here is what the bottom line is. The bottom line is we have a huge
deficit and huge tax breaks for profitable corporations. We have the
opportunity now to do what President Obama put into his 2011 budget and
eliminate those tax breaks, bring $35 billion more into the Treasury--
$25 billion for deficit reduction and $10 billion to create over
100,000 new jobs as we make our country more energy efficient and we
move to sustainable energy.
With that, I yield the remainder of my time.
Mr. INHOFE. The Senator is yielding the remainder of is time?
Mr. SANDERS. I reserve the remainder of my time. I reserve the
remainder of my time.
Mr. INHOFE. I thank my friend from Vermont. I know my friend from
Vermont would not intentionally say something that is not true.
Sometimes he does not have and sometimes I do not have the actual
facts, so inadvertently we might misrepresent.
Let me just say as far as Exxon is concerned that from 2004 to 2008,
they paid more than $18 billion in U.S. Federal income taxes, and that
is just some of the taxes they pay.
I have to say this, though. The whole discussion on this--the Sanders
bill would effectively put the small and the marginal producers in
America out of business. Before I go into that in any detail, let me
just share this. It is interesting, when I listen to liberals talk
about doing away with drilling, with oil and gas and coal and nuclear--
if you do that, you cannot run this machine called America. Every time
they talk about doing something to stop production, as they are doing
right now in the gulf--a lot of these people are using and exploiting
the tragedy in the gulf to try to retard or stop all production in
America. Consequently, this is something where we would be in a
position where we would be so rationed in oil and gas that we would
have to be more dependent on many of these countries on which we do not
want to be dependent.
We did a study. I think this would surprise the Chair. If we didn't
have any political restrictions on what we could do in North America,
we could completely eliminate our reliance upon the Middle East for any
gas or oil within 4 years. That is pretty shocking. Our problem is not
that we do not have enough oil and gas. We have more reserves than any
other country. A CRS report came out with that just the other day.
What I want to do is give my honorable friend a chance to respond to
my statement, and then I will reserve the remainder of my time to
discuss in a little more detail how this affects the very small,
marginal operators in America.
Mr. SANDERS. I will take just a few minutes now.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
Mr. SANDERS. I will reserve the remainder of my time. But let me say
this to my friend from Oklahoma, who I know is an honest guy. We
disagree. We have differences of opinion. It was not my suggestion that
ExxonMobil did not pay taxes over those years. That was not my
suggestion. But let me say this. He mentioned that they do pay taxes,
which is true. But let's understand that ExxonMobil was the most
profitable corporation in the history of the world from 2006 through
2008, making $40 billion in profits in 2006, $41 billion in 2007, and
$45 billion in 2008. In the midst of a recession, my understanding is
they made $19 billion in profits last year.
Would my friend from Oklahoma deny that despite making these huge
profits last year, $19 billion, they received--they paid zero in 2009
and in fact received a $156 million refund from the taxpayers of this
country? I hope my friend from Oklahoma would comment on whether that
is good public policy.
With that, I reserve the remainder of my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Mr. President, I would say first of all, whether that is
good policy--I think you have to have the accurate input before you
make a policy determination. The oil and gas industry is very
complicated. In order for them to go out and risk their capital, they
have to plow this money back in. Frankly, most of it is plowed back
into exploration.
What I wanted to get across, which I think is important, is that the
Sanders
[[Page S4923]]
amendment repeals three things--first of all, expensing for intangible
drilling costs; that is IDC. It repeals percentage depletion for
marginal oil and gas wells. It repeals the manufacturing deduction for
oil and gas.
I predicted a long time ago, when the gulf spill took place, that
people were going to try to parlay this into something to punish oil
and gas. This is what they have been trying to do for a long time. It
could very well be that tonight, when the President makes his big
speech, he is going to talk about, now we are going to have to look at
cap and trade, as if there is some relationship between what happened
in the gulf and cap and trade.
Repealing expensing of intangible drilling costs eliminates the
ability to expense intangible drilling and development costs, which
would force at least a 25- to 30-percent reduction in drilling budgets,
leading to lost jobs, lost production, and higher prices to consumers.
On the floor of the Senate yesterday, I spent some time talking about
how many jobs actually would be lost in the State of Louisiana. But the
IDC is an expensing-out item that has been in our Tax Code since 1913.
It really only applies to the smaller operators, so they are the ones
who are singled out for oil and gas production.
Likewise, since 1926 small producers and millions of royalty owners
have had the option to utilize percentage depletion to both simplify
and account for the decline in the value of minerals from a property.
As you know, they do deplete as you produce minerals.
Who is going to pay the most for this? I will share with you who pays
for this, but right now I will yield the floor and reserve the
remainder of my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
Mr. SANDERS. Let me say to my friend from Oklahoma, who talked about
the oil companies plowing their money back into new wells, that the big
five oil companies spent $270 billion over the past decade buying back
their own stock--about $100 billion more than they spent on oil
exploration.
My friend from Oklahoma talks about jobs. That is obviously an
important issue. I would concede there may be some job loss here, but
it is matched by an investment in sustainable energy that will create
far more employment than the relatively small number of jobs that might
be lost.
I would mention Dr. Krueger, the Chief Economist at the Treasury
Department. He has estimated that repealing these tax breaks would lead
to a decline in employment in oil and gas production of less than one-
half of 1 percent at most. That translates into the potential loss of
1,650 jobs in the oil and gas industry. I do not mean to minimize that.
One job lost is one job too many. But on the other hand, in this bill
we put $10 billion into the Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block
Grant Program, where the estimate is we can create 140,000 jobs over
the same period of time. On one hand, we might lose 1,600 jobs; on the
other hand, we gain 140,000 jobs.
With that, I reserve the remainder of my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Let me mention one thing I want to make sure I get in
here before we run out of time. We went through this class warfare once
back in 1980. We had Jimmy Carter as President of the United States. He
had the windfall profits tax. I am sure my friend from Vermont
remembers that at that time. I remember it well. That is when they were
going to have a windfall profits tax on the oil and gas industry. The
results of that:
The WPT reduced domestic production between 3 and 6 percent
and increased oil imports from 8 to 16 percent. . . . This
made the United States more dependent upon imported oil.
That is the Congressional Research Service, which is nonpartisan.
That is a major issue here in terms of our dependence on other
countries for our ability to run this machine called America.
Let's get back to the percentage depletion. The percentage depletion
is particularly important for the production of America's over 600,000
low-volume marginal wells. The average marginal well produces 2 barrels
a day.
Let me tell you what that is so my colleagues, when they get ready to
vote, will really understand whom they are affecting. A marginal well
is a well producing under 15 barrels per day. The average is 2 barrels
a day. My friend is talking about all these big giants. I am not nearly
as concerned about the big five and the majors as I am about my
marginal operators in my State of Oklahoma. With an average of 2
barrels a day, the marginal producers actually account for 28 percent
of all domestic production in the lower 48 States--28 percent. These
are all small people.
If you are concerned also about whom you are affecting by this
legislation, look at the royalty owners. There are literally millions
of royalty owners. They have maybe a small piece of property, maybe
their homestead. They are the ones who would be denied the use of their
land. By putting the small ones out of business, they are the ones you
are damaging.
I will reserve the remainder of my time.
Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, how much time does Senator Inhofe have?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma has 1\1/2\ minutes
and the Senator from Vermont 3 minutes.
Mr. SANDERS. I have 3 minutes?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Yes.
Mr. SANDERS. Mr. President, what we are talking about now is
beginning to address the deficit issue in a significant way, and $25
billion over a 10-year period is a good start. I think we cannot
continue to have people coming down to the floor of the Senate and
saying: Think about the legacy we are leaving our children and
grandchildren. And then when it really comes to the point of doing
something, of saying to ExxonMobil, which made $19 billion in profit
last year and got a $156 million refund from the IRS, you can't have it
both ways, this is a time to stand up and do the right thing. Again, it
is not just ExxonMobil. It is Chevron, which received a $19 million
refund from the IRS. It is Valero Energy, the 25th largest company in
America with $68 billion of sales last year and received a $157 million
refund check.
What we have the opportunity to do now is to, in fact, address the
deficit crisis--$25 billion over a 10-year period; create over 100,000
new jobs over that period as we move into energy efficiency and
sustainable energy.
With that, I reserve the remainder of my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
Mr. INHOFE. Let me correct this again. I had already stated that the
statement my good friend from Vermont made was a false statement,
inadvertently, in terms of Exxon and what they had paid. I commented
that they paid more than $18 billion in the years between 2004 and
2008. He returned and said in 2009 is when they have not paid any. They
have already paid $\1/2\ billion in 2009 in U.S. Federal income tax,
and they will not know the final liability until they file a return
later this year. So they are still doing it. The information that my
good friend has is false.
Getting back to the bill and who this affects, it doesn't affect
Exxon, BP, and all these giant companies. It is the small producers
that will be driven out of business. Without being able to do the
deduction of the expenses on manufacturing, if this bill passes, this
is going to single out the oil and gas industry, the only industry that
does not enjoy the same deductions. They are punitive to this industry
because right now it is quite obvious they are trying to exploit the
tragedy in the gulf.
It is my understanding I have a minute and a half remaining.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. INHOFE. I am timing it. It can't be expired.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator had a minute and a half when he
started this segment.
Mr. INHOFE. Since my colleague has the last say, may I have 30
seconds to finish? I was going to respond to the comment about the
deficit. We ought to be concerned. I am concerned about the deficit.
What is interesting about this debate, I am ranked by the National
Journal as the most conservative Member of the Senate. I suggest my
proud liberal friend from Vermont is probably on the other end of the
spectrum.
If we look at who is responsible for deficit spending, I think
Members will find he would be more responsible than
[[Page S4924]]
I would. I thank the Senator for the additional 30 seconds.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Vermont.
Mr. SANDERS. I am not a liberal but a progressive. Sometime we will
talk about the difference.
Mr. President, I did not vote for the $3 trillion war in Iraq. I did
not vote for the hundreds of billions of dollars in tax breaks. I did
not vote for the Medicare Part D Program which drove up the deficit
altogether as a matter of fact. I suspect my friend may have voted the
other way on all of those issues which were not paid for.
In terms of ExxonMobil, let's be clear. I don't know what ExxonMobil
told my colleague, but I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the
Record what ExxonMobil told the Securities and Exchange Commission, the
SEC. What is reported by the SEC for 2009 is they received a $156
million refund. That is the SEC.
I ask unanimous consent to have this printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
United States Securities and Exchange Commission
Form 10-K--Annual Report Pursuant to Section 13 or 15(d) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934
NOTES TO CONSOLIDATED FINANCIAL STATEMENTS--18. INCOME, SALES-BASED AND OTHER TAXES
[Millions of dollars]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2009 2008 2007
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
U.S. Non-U.S. Total U.S. Non-U.S. Total U.S. Non-U.S. Total
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Income taxes:
Federal and non-U.S.:
Current........................ $ (838) $15,830 $14,992 $3,005 $31,377 $34,382 $4,666 $24,329 $28,955
Deferred--net.................. 650 (665) (15) 168 1,289 1,457 (439) 415 (24)
U.S. tax on non-U.S. operations.. 32 ........... 32 230 ........... 230 263 ........... 263
Total federal and non-U.S...... (156) 15,165 15,009 3,403 32,666 36,069 4,490 24,744 29,234
State............................ 110 ........... 110 461 ........... 461 630 ........... 630
Total income taxes............. (46) 15,165 15,119 3,864 32,666 36,530 5,120 24,744 29,864
Sales-based taxes................ 6,271 19,665 25,936 6,646 27,862 34,508 7,154 24,574 31,728
All other taxes and duties:
Other taxes and duties........... 581 34,238 34,819 1,663 40,056 41,719 1,008 39,945 40,953
Included in production and 699 1,318 2,017 915 1,720 2,635 825 1,445 2,270
manufacturing expenses..........
Included in SG&A expenses........ 197 538 735 209 660 869 215 653 868
Total other taxes and duties... 1,477 36,094 37,571 2,787 42,436 45,223 2,048 42,043 44,091
Total........................ $7,702 $70,924 $78,626 $13,297 $102,964 $116,261 $14,322 $91,361 $105,683
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
All other taxes and duties include taxes reported in production and manufacturing and selling, general and administrative (SG&A) expenses. The above
provisions for deferred income taxes include net credits for the effect of changes in tax laws and rates of $9 million in 2009, $300 million in 2008
and $258 million in 2007.
Mr. INHOFE. Will the Senator yield for a question?
Mr. SANDERS. Allow me to finish my remarks. This is where we are.
Where we are right now is a moment at which we either go forward or
not, be serious or not. We hear day after day concerns about the
deficit. What we know is the oil industry, year after year, has been
enormously profitable. We know in 2009 a number of oil companies,
including ExxonMobil, did not pay any taxes. Let's do something about
it. Let's pass this amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time of the Senator has expired.
The Senator from Louisiana.
Amendment No. 4312
Mr. VITTER. Mr. President, I stand in strong support of my amendment
No. 4312. I urge all colleagues, Democrats and Republicans, to come
together to pass this commonsense amendment.
What is this amendment about? It is about something that is of great
concern to me, representing the State of Louisiana. It is about the Oil
Spill Liability Trust Fund. It is about the ongoing crisis in the gulf.
I am afraid what it is about is an example of that now famous quote of
the White House Chief of Staff, Rahm Emanuel, who, around February
2009, said: We are not going to let a good crisis go to waste. He was
talking about the financial crisis. I am afraid that same attitude,
that same politicization of real crises is going on with the ongoing
oil disaster in the gulf.
This is a real crisis, an ongoing crisis, an ongoing disaster. The
flow continues. It is so significant--even subtracting out the amount
of oil BP is capturing, it is so significant that it is like a whole
new major oilspill each and every day. It goes on and on and on.
What is the provision in this bill in relation to that crisis? In
this bill there is a dramatic increase in the tax to fund the Oil Spill
Liability Trust Fund from 8 cents per barrel to 41 cents, over a
fivefold increase. If that were going into that liability trust fund,
and if it were staying there for oil cleanup, we could come together
and probably support that effort in a bipartisan way. But instead, what
has happened?
As soon as all of that new revenue goes into the trust fund, $15
billion over 10 years, it is stolen. It is spent on unrelated spending.
It isn't a true trust fund. It is spent on other government deficit
spending. It is used essentially to hide deficit spending elsewhere. It
is double counting, what I call Enron accounting. If a private company
were doing this and putting this in their prospectus, putting this in
their SEC reports, they would be prosecuted for criminal fraud.
My amendment is simple. It says two things: Anything that goes into
the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund can only be used to clean up
oilspills. Pretty basic, pretty simple. Secondly, it cannot be double
counted, used as an offset for other unrelated government deficit
spending. That is pretty simple. I think it is a minimum requirement we
should ask in the midst of this ongoing crisis in the gulf.
Again, are we going to treat that as a real crisis and address the
challenge that is there or are we going to use and abuse that crisis in
Washington to advance preexisting agendas such as big government
spending, additional deficit, trying to mask and hide those? I suggest
the only responsible thing to do is to treat the crisis for what it is,
to respect the people of the gulf and to pass this Vitter amendment
that says, No. 1, money into that trust fund can only be used to clean
up oilspills; and, No. 2, it cannot be double counted to mask other
deficit spending.
I reserve the remainder of my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Pryor). The Senator from Minnesota.
Amendment No. 4311
Mr. FRANKEN. Mr. President, I rise to tell a very important story.
Some of my colleagues have heard me talk previously about a woman named
Tecora, a homeowner from south Minneapolis who is at risk of losing her
home. Back in 2005, Tecora was looking for a mortgage and said she
asked her bank for a conventional mortgage with fixed payments.
Presented with a series of options, she unsurprisingly chose the
cheapest one. Yet the simple option got her an exotic mortgage called
an option ARM or an adjustable rate mortgage. Now her monthly payments
have doubled over time and Tecora now owes $317,000 on a $288,000 loan.
During the housing bust and paying double what she was initially
paying on her mortgage, Tecora started having trouble with her
payments. Hoping to save her home, Tecora entered President Obama's
HAMP program which is intended for people who want to avoid
foreclosure.
One day, however, her mortgage servicer informed her that her file
was closed because she ``voluntarily left the HAMP program.'' Here is
the problem. She didn't. She never did. Tecora never asked that her
file be closed. She never tried to leave the program. Now every
[[Page S4925]]
day she worries anew about losing her home simply because her servicer
made a mistake. Tecora worked hard her whole life, but now she looks to
the future in fear.
``I'm squeaking by,'' she told the Minneapolis Star Tribune, ``by the
plaque on my teeth.''
As USA TODAY reported in March, these kinds of problems happen all
too frequently. In an article entitled ``Homes Can Be Lost by Mistake
When Banks Miscommunicate''--a headline that says exactly what it
sounds like: homes can be lost by mistake when banks miscommunicate--
the author detailed a pattern of bank errors within HAMP that have led
to people losing their homes or almost losing their homes. It should
not have to be this way. That is why I have offered an amendment with
Senators Snowe and Murray, amendment No. 4311, to create an Office of
the Homeowner Advocate for people who are struggling with problems in
the HAMP program.
This amendment is currently pending to the tax extenders bill. The
tax extenders bill aims to help people who are suffering during this
economic crisis. It includes extensions of unemployment insurance for
people who have lost their job during the recession. It promotes
American jobs by continuing the small business lending program which
has helped create or retain over 650,000 jobs since its creation. It
includes money for the national housing trust fund which will create
jobs and help ensure people have affordable places to live.
Our Office of the Homeowner Advocate would continue this effort to
provide a safety net to people who are struggling economically. In
particular, it would help one of the groups of people who have suffered
the most during the recession--homeowners. Our Office of the Homeowner
Advocate is modeled after the very successful Office of the Taxpayer
Advocate at the IRS. It would ensure that homeowners participating in
the HAMP program know that someone is on their side, someone with the
authority to actually fix the mistakes created by mortgage servicers
participating in HAMP. When homeowners call this office with concerns,
the office has two important powers. First, it can make sure servicers
actually obey the rules of the program or suffer the consequences.
Second, it ensures that the bank would not be able to sell people's
homes right away, giving the homeowner advocate time to actually solve
the problem. The office is temporary, lasting only as long as HAMP
does. But while it lasts, it ensures that homeowners would not be
losing their homes because of simple errors.
This amendment is supported by the Treasury Department. When we first
filed the amendment to the Wall Street reform bill, the White House
declared it one of the top 10 amendments that would improve the Wall
Street reform bill. Unfortunately, the amendment didn't receive a vote.
So we are bringing it to the Senate once again to ensure that
homeowners in all of our States have the protections they need.
The amendment is supported by consumer groups from around the
country, ranging from Americans for Financial Reform to Consumers
Union, SEIU, and the National Council of La Raza. It is also supported
by the superintendent of the New York State banking system, who calls
it a big step forward for homeowners.
Significantly, Congress will not have to authorize any additional
appropriations for this amendment. Let me say that again: Congress will
not have to authorize any additional appropriations for this amendment.
The office would be funded entirely by existing HAMP administrative
funds. I am going to say it again. We will be helping homeowners
without authorizing any new money at all--nothing, zero, zip.
I was pleased to work with Senator Vitter, who just spoke, to make
this amendment even stronger by ensuring that no homeowner can game the
system and still participate in HAMP, and also by increasing the
transparency of the program. These two changes are incorporated in this
modification to our amendment, which also incorporates some changes
suggested by Senator Shelby to ensure that the Homeowner Advocate
process does not overly delay appropriate foreclosures.
I hope my colleagues see that the Homeowner Advocate is an easy way
to help homeowners in all our hometowns--in Minnesota, in Arkansas, all
over this country--get the protections they need to keep their homes.
Let's adopt this amendment and stand up for homeowners everywhere in
this country.
Mr. President, I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
The Senator from Montana.
Amendment No. 4312
Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I wish to speak in opposition to the
Vitter amendment.
The Senator from Louisiana is essentially offering an amendment which
has the effect of preventing the oilspill liability tax from going into
effect. This is a head-scratching amendment. Why in the world would any
Senator suggest there be no increase in the oilspill liability tax?
Right now, beginning in about--let's see, what year was it?--1990,
Congress, in the wake of the Exxon Valdez oilspill, enacted an Oil
Spill Liability Trust Fund and oilspill liability tax, obviously, to
pay for potential or future oilspills. The tax was set at 5 cents a
barrel. In the 20 years since that time, the tax has been increased
just 3 cents to 8 cents a barrel. At the same time, the price of oil
has increased, since 1990, from the neighborhood of $20 a barrel to $72
a barrel today. Within the last 2 years, oil has been as high as $147 a
barrel.
So with the increased evidence of the damage oilspills can create,
and with the increased price of oil, we thought it was an appropriate
time to raise the oilspill liability tax on oil companies to help pay
for future spills. That is why we are doing this. In this bill, we
propose to raise that tax to 41 cents a barrel. That is a very modest
increase, where today oil in the market is roughly $72 a barrel.
You hear this argument--it is not even an argument. It is like Alice
in Wonderland stuff. I do not know where this stuff comes from. It is
Alice in Wonderland stuff, that somehow we should not do this because
it is double counting or something like that. The money that is raised
from the oilspill liability tax goes to the Oil Spill Liability Trust
Find. And our Federal Government has a cash flow system of accounting,
so by definition we will start to lower the budget deficit. That is not
double counting. That is just the way it works.
It sounds as though the Senator from Louisiana either does not want
to lower the budget deficit or he does not want to increase the tax on
oil companies from 8 cents a barrel, which is so small. The fact is,
what he is doing is saying this: He is saying that the Budget Office,
for budget purposes, cannot count the oilspill liability tax to reduce
the budget deficit. So, in effect, what he is saying is, there is no
oilspill liability tax. What he is saying is the taxpayers should pay
for the cleanup, not the oil companies. That is basically what he is
saying. He is basically saying--by putting the kibosh on the Oil Spill
Liability Trust Fund and the revenue coming from it--that he wants to
protect the oil companies, protect the oil companies from any increase
in the taxes from 8 cents a barrel up to 41 cents a barrel and, rather,
have the taxpayers pay for the cleanup, not the oil companies that
would pay the increase in the oilspill liability tax but the taxpayers.
I do not think that is what the vast majority of Americans wish to
see. I think that is over the top and I, therefore, urge my colleagues
to roundly defeat the amendment from the Senator from Louisiana who, in
effect, does not want the oilspill liability tax increased and, in
effect, is saying, taxpayers, pay for the cleanup, not the oil
companies.
Mr. President, I reserve the remainder of my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.
Mr. VITTER. Mr. President, how much time do I have remaining?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator has 5 minutes 43 seconds--all on
this amendment.
Mr. VITTER. Mr. President, it is a little difficult to know where to
start, since my good friend and colleague has said so many things that
are flat out wrong.
No. 1, my amendment does not prevent the tax increase. That is
absolutely and perfectly clear. Let me say
[[Page S4926]]
it again. My amendment does not block and does not prevent the tax
increase.
No. 2, my amendment does do two things. It says that any money in the
Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund can only be used for oilspill cleanup
and, secondly, that it cannot be used to offset other spending. That is
exactly what is going on in this bill.
My colleague knows that the $15 billion created by this tax increase
is used as an offset in this bill. It masks spending in this bill of
$15 billion. If it were not for that money, the ``score'' of this bill
would be $15 billion higher. It would go from $79 billion to $94
billion.
What I am saying is simple. We should not be grabbing, stealing that
oilspill liability money to mask other spending, to double count it, to
essentially steal it from the trust fund.
Again, my amendment does not prohibit the tax increase. By the way,
if my colleague thinks the oil companies are paying that tax, not the
consumer, I do not think he understands how the world works. But my
amendment does not block that tax increase. It simply says money in the
Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund has to be used for oilspill cleanup, and
it cannot be used as an offset, cannot be double counted for other
spending, as it is clearly in this bill.
Mr. President, I reserve the remainder of my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time?
Mr. VITTER. Mr. President, if everyone else is amenable, I am
prepared to yield back--if everyone else is yielding back.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
Mr. BAUCUS. Mr. President, I believe there is a Senator who might
want to speak on this amendment. We are tracking him down right now. So
I suggest we do not yield back the remainder of our time.
Mr. VITTER. Then, Mr. President, 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. VITTER. 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. VITTER. Mr. President, I want to ensure that the quorum call does
not run down my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator would like the time divided
evenly?
Mr. VITTER. Yes, that would be my request, Mr. President.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Without objection, it is so ordered, on this
amendment.
Mr. VITTER. 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. VITTER. 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. VITTER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that all time on
all amendments be yielded back. I believe that is amenable to everyone.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
The Senator from Louisiana.
Vote On Amendment No. 4318
Mr. VITTER. Mr. President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There appears to be a sufficient second.
The question is on agreeing to the Sanders amendment No. 4318.
The clerk will call the roll.
The assistant legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from West Virginia (Mr. Byrd)
and the Senator from South Dakota (Mr. Johnson) are necessarily absent.
Mr. KYL. The following Senators are necessarily absent: the Senator
from Florida (Mr. LeMieux) and the Senator from Kansas (Mr. Roberts).
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mrs. Hagan). Are there any other Senators in
the Chamber desiring to vote?
The result was announced--yeas 35, nays 61, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 187 Leg.]
YEAS--35
Boxer
Brown (OH)
Burris
Cantwell
Cardin
Carper
Casey
Durbin
Feingold
Feinstein
Franken
Gillibrand
Harkin
Kaufman
Klobuchar
Kohl
Lautenberg
Leahy
Levin
McCaskill
Menendez
Merkley
Mikulski
Murray
Nelson (FL)
Reed
Reid
Rockefeller
Sanders
Schumer
Shaheen
Specter
Stabenow
Whitehouse
Wyden
NAYS--61
Akaka
Alexander
Barrasso
Baucus
Bayh
Begich
Bennet
Bennett
Bingaman
Bond
Brown (MA)
Brownback
Bunning
Burr
Chambliss
Coburn
Cochran
Collins
Conrad
Corker
Cornyn
Crapo
DeMint
Dodd
Dorgan
Ensign
Enzi
Graham
Grassley
Gregg
Hagan
Hatch
Hutchison
Inhofe
Inouye
Isakson
Johanns
Kerry
Kyl
Landrieu
Lieberman
Lincoln
Lugar
McCain
McConnell
Murkowski
Nelson (NE)
Pryor
Risch
Sessions
Shelby
Snowe
Tester
Thune
Udall (CO)
Udall (NM)
Vitter
Voinovich
Warner
Webb
Wicker
NOT VOTING--4
Byrd
Johnson
LeMieux
Roberts
The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 35, the nays are
61. Under the previous order, requiring 60 votes for the adoption of
this amendment, the amendment is withdrawn.
Mr. SPECTER. Madam President, I voted for the Sanders amendment on
tax incentives for oil and natural gas production to H.R. 4213, the Tax
Extenders Act.
Pennsylvania is in the midst of a historic boom in natural gas
production from the Marcellus Shale formation. This industry is on
track to create hundreds of thousands of jobs in the Commonwealth, and
billions of dollars in revenue, both of which are badly needed in my
home State. But the development of one natural resource must proceed
with the utmost care for two others: water and land. I know that the
natural gas industry desires to maintain the tax incentives which would
be removed by the Sanders amendment. President Obama has also proposed
removing these tax incentives in his fiscal year 2011 budget proposal.
However, I cannot support further incentives for natural gas until that
industry agrees to full public disclosure of the chemical composition
of its hydraulic fracturing fluids, which are used to break apart the
shale deep underground and initiate the gas flow. There is placeholder
language to this effect in the discussion draft of the Kerry-Lieberman
American Power Act, and I hope that natural gas companies large and
small will support these provisions as the bill, or another energy
bill, moves forward into law. There are many issues that the natural
gas industry must cooperate with the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania on,
including hydraulic fracturing disclosure, wastewater recycling,
responsible well development, and a severance tax. My support for
incentives for natural gas will remain contingent on that industry
demonstrating its commitment to developing the Marcellus Shale in a
manner that all Pennsylvanians will look back on, generations from now,
with pride.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Madam President, I opposed the amendment of my friend
from Vermont. Although I understand his frustration and his intentions,
I could not agree with the effects of the amendment. Over the years, as
chairman and ranking member of the Finance Committee, I have supported
policy reforms in taxation of oil and gas income. Many times, the major
oil firms have registered their objections. Also, in the area of
corporate taxation, I pushed hard to curtail a practice that oil firms
used to erode the U.S. tax base. That practice, known as corporate
inversions, was curtailed in the 2004 FSC-ETI legislation.
I re-doubled my efforts to make the reform applicable to four oil
service firms but was rebuffed by the House of Representatives'
leadership in the years 2004-2007.
Chairman Baucus and I have been careful to not impair tax incentives
for independent, smaller producer oil and gas production. We have
differentiated the availability of these incentives for smaller
producers and made clear that major oil and gas producers did not
receive many of these incentives.
[[Page S4927]]
The amendment of my friend from Vermont blurs that line and would
adversely affect domestic production. We need to ensure an adequate
supply of domestic oil and gas to keep the price at the pump down.
Together with incentives for alternative fuels, line ethanol and
biodiesel, and conservation, these small producer incentives with
hopefully reduce our reliance on imported oil. Chairman Baucus joins me
in this view.
For these reasons, I opposed the amendment of my friend from Vermont.
Mr. CONRAD. Madam President, section 302(a) of S. Con. Res. 13, the
2010 budget resolution, permits the chairman of the Senate Budget
Committee to adjust the allocations of a committee or committees,
aggregates, and other appropriate levels and limits in the resolution
for legislation that invests in clean energy and preserves the
environment, including legislation that encourages conservation and
efficiency. This adjustment to S. Con. Res. 13 is contingent on the
legislation not increasing the deficit over either the period of the
total of fiscal years 2009 through 2014 or the period of the total of
fiscal years 2009 through 2019.
I find that Senate amendment No. 4318, an amendment offered by
Senator Sanders to Senate amendment No. 4301, an amendment in the
nature of a substitute to H.R. 4213, fulfills the conditions of the
deficit-neutral reserve fund to invest in clean energy and preserve the
environment. Therefore, pursuant to section 302(a), I am adjusting the
aggregates in the 2010 budget resolution, as well as the allocation to
the Senate Finance Committee.
I ask unanimous consent that the following revisions to S. Con. Res.
13 be printed in the Record.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2010--S. CON. RES.
13; FURTHER REVISIONS TO THE CONFERENCE AGREEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION
302(a) DEFICIT-NEUTRAL RESERVE FUND TO INVEST IN CLEAN ENERGY AND
PRESERVE THE ENVIRONMENT
[In billions of dollars]
Section 101
(1)(A) Federal Revenues:
FY 2009...................................................1,532.579
FY 2010...................................................1,612.278
FY 2011...................................................1,942.056
FY 2012...................................................2,146.937
FY 2013...................................................2,329.824
FY 2014...................................................2,579.743
(1)(B) Change in Federal Revenues:
FY 2009.......................................................0.008
FY 2010.....................................................-53.708
FY 2011....................................................-146.575
FY 2012....................................................-213.456
FY 2013....................................................-185.513
FY 2014.....................................................-53.915
(2) New Budget Authority:
FY 2009...................................................3,675.736
FY 2010...................................................2,907.837
FY 2011...................................................2,860.866
FY 2012...................................................2,833.668
FY 2013...................................................2,993.128
FY 2014...................................................3,206.977
(3) Budget Outlays:
FY 2009...................................................3,358.952
FY 2010...................................................3,015.541
FY 2011...................................................2,976.851
FY 2012...................................................2,879.495
FY 2013...................................................2,993.782
3,183.027............................................................
____
CONCURRENT RESOLUTION ON THE BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2010--S. CON. RES.
13; FURTHER REVISIONS TO THE CONFERENCE AGREEMENT PURSUANT TO SECTION
302(a) DEFICIT-NEUTRAL RESERVE FUND TO INVEST IN CLEAN ENERGY AND
PRESERVE THE ENVIRONMENT
[In millions of dollars]
Current Allocation to Senate Finance Committee:
FY 2009 Budget Authority..................................1,178,757
FY2009 Outlays...........................................1,166,970
FY 2010 Budget Authority..................................1,247,336
FY 2010 Outlays...........................................1,241,472
FY 2010-2014 Budget Authority.............................6,865,787
FY 2010-2014 Outlays......................................6,840,905
Adjustments:
FY 2009 Budget Authority..........................................0
FY 2009 Outlays...................................................0
FY 2010 Budget Authority..........................................0
FY 2010 Outlays...................................................0
FY 2010-2014 Budget Authority.................................8,000
FY 2010-2014 Outlays..........................................4,830
Revised Allocation to Senate Finance Committee:
FY 2009 Budget Authority..................................1,178,757
FY 2009 Outlays...........................................1,166,970
FY 2010 Budget Authority..................................1,247,336
FY 2010 Outlays...........................................1,241,472
FY 2010-2014 Budget Authority.............................6,873,787
FY 2010-2014 Outlays......................................6,845,735
Amendment No. 4312
The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is 2 minutes of debate, evenly divided,
prior to a vote in relation to the Vitter amendment No. 4312. Who
yields time?
The Senator from Montana is recognized.
Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, I don't see the proponent of the
amendment on the Senate floor.
There he comes.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana is recognized.
Mr. VITTER. Madam President, I urge support for the Vitter amendment.
It does two very simple things: It says any money coming into the Oil
Spill Liability Trust Fund can only be used to clean up oilspills. It
also says the money cannot be used as an offset for unrelated spending,
as it is in this bill. It cannot be used to mask other deficit spending
or as an offset for unrelated spending.
The amendment specifically does not negate or block the tax increase
of funds into the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund.
I reserve the reminder of my time.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Montana.
Mr. BAUCUS. Madam President, this amendment is sheer sophistry. The
effect of his amendment will say that not oil companies but the
taxpayers will pay for cleanups.
The effect of this amendment would mean no increase in oilspill
liability tax from 8 cents a barrel today up to 41 cents. If there is
no increase in the spill liability tax, oil companies aren't going to
pay for future cleanups, the taxpayers will. He has this--I said
``sophistry.'' So it is a sophistry kind of argument. It is fog and
double counting and bead counting. That is not what is going on here.
The bottom line is this amendment has the effect of taxpayers paying
for the cleanup, not the oil companies. This will effectively repeal
the increase up to 41 cents per barrel. I urge Senators to not support
this amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Louisiana.
Mr. VITTER. Madam President, how much time remains?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. There is 21 seconds remaining.
Mr. VITTER. My good friend and colleague's argument is not sophistry,
it is just statements that are not true. This amendment does not block
the tax increase, period. It does not. It simply says the money has to
be used to clean up oil spills, and it cannot be used as an offset for
other spending. Please support this amendment.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The time has expired on the amendment.
Mr. VITTER. Madam President, I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second? There is a
sufficient second.
The question is on agreeing to the amendment. The clerk will call the
roll.
The bill clerk called the roll.
Mr. DURBIN, I announce that the Senator from West Virginia (Mr. Byrd)
is necessarily absent.
Mr. KYL. The following Senators are necessarily absent: the Senator
from Florida (Mr. LeMieux) and the Senator from Kansas (Mr. Roberts).
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Are there any other Senators in the Chamber
desiring to vote?
The result was announced--yeas 48, nays 49, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 188 Leg.]
YEAS--48
Alexander
Barrasso
Begich
Bennett
Bond
Brown (MA)
Brownback
Bunning
Burr
Chambliss
Coburn
Cochran
Collins
Conrad
Corker
Cornyn
Crapo
DeMint
Dorgan
Ensign
Enzi
Graham
Grassley
Gregg
Hagan
Hatch
Hutchison
Inhofe
Isakson
Johanns
Kyl
Landrieu
Lieberman
Lugar
McCain
McConnell
Merkley
Murkowski
Nelson (NE)
Nelson (FL)
Risch
Sessions
Shelby
Snowe
Thune
Vitter
Voinovich
Wicker
[[Page S4928]]
NAYS--49
Akaka
Baucus
Bayh
Bennet
Bingaman
Boxer
Brown (OH)
Burris
Cantwell
Cardin
Carper
Casey
Dodd
Durbin
Feingold
Feinstein
Franken
Gillibrand
Harkin
Inouye
Johnson
Kaufman
Kerry
Klobuchar
Kohl
Lautenberg
Leahy
Levin
Lincoln
McCaskill
Menendez
Mikulski
Murray
Pryor
Reed
Reid
Rockefeller
Sanders
Schumer
Shaheen
Specter
Stabenow
Tester
Udall (CO)
Udall (NM)
Warner
Webb
Whitehouse
Wyden
NOT VOTING--3
Byrd
LeMieux
Roberts
The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 48, the nays are
49. Under the previous order requiring 60 votes for the adoption of
this amendment, the amendment is withdrawn.
vote explanation
Mr. SPECTER. Madam President, I voted against the Vitter amendment on
the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund to H.R. 4213, the Tax Extenders Act,
because no matter what the size of the trust fund, the party
responsible for an oil spill must pay all costs of its cleanup, and is
also responsible for economic damages caused by the spill. This
amendment will not reduce in any way the available resources for
combating the spill in the gulf, or any other future spill. The moneys
in the Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund may be used to advance cleanup
costs but that does not relieve British Petroleum as the primarily
liable party for paying the full costs of the gulf spill cleanup which
will reimburse the trust fund for any funds expended.
Amendment No. 4311
The PRESIDING OFFICER. There will now be 2 minutes evenly divided
prior to a vote in relation to the Franken amendment No. 4311.
Who yields time?
The Senator from Minnesota.
Mr. FRANKEN. Madam President, let me tell you about this amendment.
It comes from me and Senator Snowe, and it would create the Office of
the Homeowner Advocate within HAMP. It is needed because people don't
really have an advocate within HAMP. They get their questions answered
from servicers who often make mistakes, and people have been losing
their homes simply because of mistakes.
The White House called this one of the 10 best amendments for the
Wall Street reform bill. It didn't get a vote then. It costs nothing.
No new money. It costs absolutely nothing. Senator Vitter weighed in
and made it better by having me put in something about people who can
afford their mortgage can't participate in HAMP, and it removes
language that would delay foreclosures.
I urge all my colleagues to vote--that was telling me I was out of
time?
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Order in the Chamber.
Mr. FRANKEN. Oh, it was order in the Chamber.
In that case, I will also say that it will make data public. Also,
Senator Vitter and Senator Shelby weighed in on this and made it
better. So it is safe for Members on both sides of the aisle to vote
for this.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. FRANKEN. Thank you.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Who yields time in opposition.
Mr. SHELBY. I yield back time, and I ask for the yeas and nays.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there a sufficient second?
There appears to be a sufficient second.
The question is on agreeing to the amendment.
The clerk will call the roll.
The legislative clerk called the roll.
Mr. DURBIN. I announce that the Senator from California (Mrs. Boxer)
and the Senator from West Virginia (Mr. Byrd) are necessarily absent.
Mr. KYL. The following Senators are necessarily absent: the Senator
from Florida (Mr. LeMieux) and the Senator from Kansas (Mr. Roberts).
The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Udall of Colorado). Are there any other
Senators in the Chamber desiring to vote?
The result was announced--yeas 63, nays 33, as follows:
[Rollcall Vote No. 189 Leg.]
YEAS--63
Akaka
Baucus
Bayh
Begich
Bennet
Bingaman
Brown (MA)
Brown (OH)
Burr
Burris
Cantwell
Cardin
Carper
Casey
Collins
Dodd
Dorgan
Durbin
Feingold
Feinstein
Franken
Gillibrand
Graham
Grassley
Hagan
Harkin
Inouye
Johnson
Kaufman
Kerry
Klobuchar
Kohl
Landrieu
Lautenberg
Leahy
Levin
Lieberman
Lincoln
McCaskill
Menendez
Merkley
Mikulski
Murkowski
Murray
Nelson (FL)
Pryor
Reed
Reid
Rockefeller
Sanders
Schumer
Shaheen
Snowe
Specter
Stabenow
Tester
Udall (CO)
Udall (NM)
Vitter
Warner
Webb
Whitehouse
Wyden
NAYS--33
Alexander
Barrasso
Bennett
Bond
Brownback
Bunning
Chambliss
Coburn
Cochran
Conrad
Corker
Cornyn
Crapo
DeMint
Ensign
Enzi
Gregg
Hatch
Hutchison
Inhofe
Isakson
Johanns
Kyl
Lugar
McCain
McConnell
Nelson (NE)
Risch
Sessions
Shelby
Thune
Voinovich
Wicker
NOT VOTING--4
Boxer
Byrd
LeMieux
Roberts
The PRESIDING OFFICER. On this vote, the yeas are 63, the nays are
33. Under the previous order requiring 60 votes for the adoption of
this amendment, the amendment is agreed to.
The Senator from Iowa is recognized.
Mr. GRASSLEY. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent to speak 9
minutes as in morning business.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. Is there objection?
Without objection, it is so ordered.
____________________